Plumbago auriculata Lam.  
Family: Plumbaginaceae
Cape plumbago,  more...
[Plumbago capensis Thunb.]
Plumbago auriculata image
Liz Makings  
Plants evergreen shrubs. Stems erect, trailing, or climbing, diffusely branched, to 3+ m, glabrous or pubescent on youngest shoots. Leaves usually sessile, sometimes short-petiolate; blade elliptic, oblanceolate, or spatulate, (1-)2.5-9 × 0.5-2.5 cm, base usually long-attenuate, sometimes auriculate, apex acute or obtuse, mucronate. Inflorescences 2.5-3(-5) cm, rachises short-pilose (hairs ca. 0.1 mm), eglandular; floral bracts lanceolate, 3-9 × 1-2 mm. Flowers 3-stylous; calyx 10-13 mm, tube usually short-pilose and with stalked, capitate, glandlike protuberances ca. 1 mm along distal 1/ 3/ 4 of ribs; corolla pale blue, 37-53 mm, tube 28-40 mm (more than 2 times length of calyx), lobes 10-16 × 6-15 mm; stamens included or exserted. Capsules 8 mm. Seeds brown, 7 mm. 2n = 14 + 0-1B. Flowering year-round. Hummocks, thickets, dis-turbed sites in dry soil; 0-50 m; introduced; Fla.; s Africa. Plumbago auriculata is frequently cultivated in Mediterranean-type warmer climates, especially in California, Arizona, and Texas.

Plumbago auriculata image
Plumbago auriculata image
Arizona State University Herbarium  
Plumbago auriculata image
Arizona State University Herbarium  
       Web Links       View Parent Taxon       Close window