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Overview

Distribution

Pittosporum tenuifolium Banks & Sol. ex Gaertn.:
New Zealand (Oceania)
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© Missouri Botanical Garden, 4344 Shaw Boulevard, St. Louis, MO 63110 USA

Source: Missouri Botanical Garden

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Physical Description

Type Information

Possible isotype for Pittosporum tenuifolium Gaertn.
Collection: Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History, Department of Botany
Verification Degree: Original publication and alleged type specimen examined
Preparation: Pressed specimen
Collector(s): J. Banks & D. C. Solander
Year Collected: 1769
Locality: Near Tolaga, Opuragi, Oouhuragi, Tarata Nui., New Zealand, Australasia
  • Possible isotype: Gaertner, J. 1788. Fruct. Sem. Lith. 1: 286.
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© Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History, Department of Botany

Source: National Museum of Natural History Image Collection

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Wikipedia

Pittosporum tenuifolium

Pittosporum tenuifolium is a small evergreen tree (up to 10 meters) native to New Zealand, known by the Māori as kohuhu and kohukohu, or as Black Matipo (though it is not really a matipo tree). It is sometimes grown under the cultivar name 'Nigricans', so called because of its black stems. In horticulture it is valued for its coloured foliage (cultivated variations include purple, "silver" and variegated leaves), and for its tolerance of some horticulturally difficult growing conditions, including dry soils and shade (although in northwest Europe, cold and exposed situations do not suit it). The flowers generally go unnoticed because of their colour, a very dark reddish-purple, and are scented only at night. It is found growing wild in coastal and lower mountain forest areas up to an altitude of 900m.

See also

References

  1. http://www.rhs.org.uk/Learning/publications/pubs_bulletins.asp
  2. Plant Assessment - Pittosporum tenuifolium hybrids and cultivars, by Diana M Miller. Royal Horticultural Society publication July 2006
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