Olearia
Olearia | |
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Olearia stuartii | |
Scientific classification | |
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Genus: | Olearia |
Type species | |
Olearia tomentosa (J.C.Wendl.) DC
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Species | |
See text. |
Olearia is a genus of flowering plants belonging to the family Asteraceae. There are about 130 different species within the genus found mostly in Australia, New Guinea and New Zealand. The genus includes herbaceous plants, shrubs and small trees. The latter are unusual among the Asteraceae and are called tree daisies in New Zealand. Shrubs are called daisy bushes. All bear the familiar daisy-like composite flowerheads.
The genus is named after Johann Gottfried Olearius, a 17th-century German scholar and author of Specimen Florae Hallensis.[1] Originally a large genus, a molecular study has found it to be polyphyletic.[2]
Olearia species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species including Aenetus ligniveren, which burrows into the trunk.
Several species are cultivated as ornamental garden plants, and there are hybrids of uncertain or mixed parentage. Among these, the following have been given the Royal Horticultural Society’s Award of Garden Merit:-[3]
- Olearia macrodonta, New Zealand holly[4]
- Olearia × mollis ‘Zennorensis’, daisy bush ‘Zennorensis’[5]
- Olearia × scilloniensis ‘Master Michael’, Scilly daisy bush[6]
They are generally hardy down to −10 °C (14 °F), but require a sheltered spot in full sun.
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O. argophylla
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O. insignis
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O. lyallii
Species
Selected species:
- Olearia adenocarpa
- Olearia albida – tanguru
- Olearia algida - alpine daisy-bush
- Olearia allomii
- Olearia angulata
- Olearia angustifolia
- Olearia arborescens – common tree daisy
- Olearia argophylla - musk daisy-bush, native musk, silver shrub
- Olearia asterotricha - rough daisy-bush
- Olearia astroloba - marble daisy-bush
- Olearia avicenniifolia – Akeake
- Olearia axillaris - coast daisy-bush
- Olearia ballii - mountain daisy
- Olearia buchananii
- Olearia bullata
- Olearia canescens - grey daisy-bush
- Olearia capillaris
- Olearia chathamica
- Olearia cheesmanii – streamside tree daisy
- Olearia ciliata - fringed daisy-bush
- Olearia colensoi
- Olearia covenyi
- Olearia coriacea
- Olearia decurrens - clammy daisy-bush[7]
- Olearia elliptica - sticky daisy-bush
- Olearia ericoides
- Olearia erubescens - pink-tip daisy-bush, moth daisy-bush
- Olearia flocktoniae - Dorrigo daisy-bush
- Olearia floribunda - heath daisy-bush
- Olearia fragrantissima
- Olearia frostii - Bogong daisy-bush
- Olearia furfuracea - akepiro
- Olearia glandulosa - swamp daisy-bush
- Olearia glutinosa - sticky daisy-bush
- Olearia haastii
- Olearia hectorii
- Olearia homolepis
- Olearia hookeri
- Olearia ilicifolia – hakeke
- Olearia insignis
- Olearia iodochroa - violet daisy-bush
- Olearia lacunosa - lancewood tree daisy
- Olearia ledifolia
- Olearia lepidophylla - club-moss daisy-bush
- Olearia lirata - snowy daisy-bush
- Olearia lyallii
- Olearia macrodonta - mountain holly, New Zealand holly, arorangi
- Olearia magniflora - splendid daisy-bush
- Olearia megalophylla - large-leaf daisy-bush
- Olearia microphylla - small-leaf daisy-bush
- Olearia mooneyi
- Olearia moschata
- Olearia myrsinoides - blush daisy-bush, silky daisy-bush
- Olearia nernstii
- Olearia nummulariifolia
- Olearia obcordata
- Olearia odorata - scented tree daisy
- Olearia oporina
- Olearia pachyphylla
- Olearia paniculata - akiraho
- Olearia pannosa - velvet daisy-bush
- Olearia persoonioides
- Olearia phlogopappa - dusty daisy-bush
- Olearia pimeleoides - pimelea daisy-bush
- Olearia pinifolia
- Olearia polita
- Olearia quercifolia -oak-leaved daisy-bush
- Olearia ramulosa - twiggy daisy-bush
- Olearia rani – heketara
- Olearia rotundifolia
- Olearia semidentata
- Olearia solandri - coastal tree daisy
- Olearia speciosa - netted daisy-bush
- Olearia stuartii
- Olearia suffruticosa - clustered daisy-bush
- Olearia tasmanica
- Olearia teretifolia - cypress daisy-bush
- Olearia tomentosa - toothed daisy-bush[7]
- Olearia traversii – Chatham Island akeake, Chatham Island tree daisy
- Olearia virgata
- Olearia viscidula - viscid daisy-bush[7]
- Olearia viscosa - sticky daisy-bush
References
- ^ Moench, Conrad. 1802. Supplementum ad Methodum Plantas. pp. 254-255
- ^ Cross, E.W.; Quinn, C.J.; Wagstaff, S.J. (2002). "Molecular evidence for the polyphyly of Olearia (Astereae: Asteraceae)". Plant Systematics and Evolution. 235 (1–4): 99–120. doi:10.1007/s00606-002-0198-9. JSTOR 23645039.
- ^ "AGM Plants - Ornamental" (PDF). Royal Horticultural Society. July 2017. p. 69. Retrieved 14 April 2018.
- ^ "RHS Plantfinder - Olearia macrodonta". Retrieved 14 April 2018.
- ^ "RHS Plantfinder - Olearia × mollis 'Zennorensis'". Retrieved 14 April 2018.
- ^ "RHS Plantfinder - Olearia × scilloniensis 'Master Michael'". Retrieved 14 April 2018.
- ^ a b c WIlson, Paul G. "Search terms: olearia". New South Wales Flora Online. National Herbarium of New South Wales.
- "Olearia Moench". Australian Plant Name Index (APNI), IBIS database. Centre for Plant Biodiversity Research, Australian Government.