Page:Manual of the New Zealand Flora.djvu/740

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700
IRIDEÆ.
[Libertia.

½–¾ in. long, broadly oblong or obovoid, yellow when fully ripe.—Handb. N.Z. Fl. 274. L. macrocarpa, Klatt in Linnæa, xxxi. (1861–62) 384. Renealmia grandiflora, R. Br. Prodr. Add. 592.

North and South Islands: From the North Cape to Otago, but not so common as L. ixioides. October–November.

But for the great difference in the size of the capsule this might very well have been regarded as a variety of L. ixioides.


3. L. pulchella, Spreng. Syst. i. 168.—Small, slender, 3–9 in. high. Rhizome often elongated, sometimes branched at the top. Leaves 2–6 in. long, 1/121/6 in. broad, grassy, hardly rigid, margins smooth or ciliolate. Scape usually longer than the leaves, bearing a single terminal subumbellate cluster of 3–8 small white flowers, or in large specimens 1 or 2 other clusters may be developed lower down the scape; pedicels very slender, pubescent, ¾–1 in. long; bracts numerous, whorled at the base of the clusters. Perianth ⅓–½ in. diam.; segments almost equal, oblong-obovate. Capsule ⅙–⅕ in. diam., globose, membranous.—Benth. Fl. Austral. vi. 413. L. micrantha, A. Cunn. Precur. n. 308; Raoul, Choix, 41; Hook. f. Fl. Nov. Zel. i. 252; Handb. N.Z. Fl. 274.

North and South Islands, Stewart Island: Damp mossy places in hilly forests throughout, not uncommon. Sea-level to 4000 ft. November–January. Also in south-eastern Australia and Tasmania.


Order LXXXI. AMARYLLIDEÆ.

Usually perennial herbs, sometimes of large size. Rootstock bulbous, tuberous, tufted or creeping. Leaves generally all radical, narrow, not usually equitant or distichous. Flowers regular or slightly irregular, hermaphrodite, in terminal umbels or racemes or panicles, rarely solitary; peduncles or scapes naked or bracteate. Perianth superior, petaloid, tube long or short, limb 6-lobed or -partite, sometimes bearing at the throat a petaloid corona (Narcissus, &c.). Stamens 6, inserted on the perianth-tube or at the base of the segments and opposite to them; filaments free or united at the base; anthers 2-celled, versatile, introrse. Ovary inferior, 3-celled; style filiform or columnar, stigma simple or 3-fid; ovules numerous, in 2 series in the inner angle of each cell, anatropous. Fruit usually a 3-celled capsule with loculicidal dehiscence, rarely an indehiscent berry. Seeds generally numerous, sometimes reduced to 1 or 2 in each cell; albumen fleshy; embryo small, axile.

A well-known and widely distributed order, found in all warm and temperate countries, but (like the preceding family) decidedly rare in Asia. Genera 65; species under 700. It includes the American aloe (Agave americana), which can be applied to a wonderful variety of uses. Both it and other species of Agave are valuable fibre-plants, A. rigida being the well-known sisal hemp.