Buddleja cestriflora

Buddleja cestriflora is a rare species endemic to a small area near the eastern coast of Brazil, where it grows in the cloud forest along roadsides and in wet rocky clearings on the eastern border of Serra Geral of Santa Catarina and Rio Grande do Sul. The species was first described and named by Chamisso in 1833.[1][2]

Buddleja cestriflora
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Lamiales
Family: Scrophulariaceae
Genus: Buddleja
Species:
B. cestriflora
Binomial name
Buddleja cestriflora

Description

Buddleja cestriflora is a shrub 12 m high, with young branches which are subquadrangular and tomentose. The membranaceous leaves are narrowly lanceolate, 719 cm long by 24 cm wide, with a tomentulose to glabrescent upper surface, lanose below. The orange inflorescences are 1025 cm long by 720 cm wide on one or two orders of branches bearing paired cymes, each with 612 flowers; the corolla tubes are 2740 mm long.[2]

The species is very similar to B. grandiflora and B. tubiflora.[2]

Cultivation

The shrub is not known to be in cultivation.

References

  1. Chamisso, A. von (1833). Linnaea 8:20, 1833
  2. Norman, E. M. (2000). Buddlejaceae. Flora Neotropica 81. New York Botanical Garden, USA
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