- Hoya macgillivrayi
Taxobox
status = R
status_system = QLDNCA
regnum =Plant ae
divisio = Magnoliophyta
classis =Magnoliopsida
ordo =Gentianales
familia =Apocynaceae
subfamilia =Asclepiadoideae
genus = "Hoya "
species = "H. macgillivrayi"
binomial = "Hoya macgillivrayi"
binomial_authority =F.M.Bailey "Hoya macgillivrayi" is a fast growing vine native to northeastern
Australia . It has oval pointed leaves and has a twining growth habit. The flowers of the plant are approximately 6 cm in diameter and vary slightly in size, shape, and color from each cultivar. They come in umbels of 6 to 10 flowers that are each connected at a central axis. Each flower is a dark bergundy color with five sepals and five petals. The stamen are enclosed in the corona. The fruit produced are two pairs of follicles that are 25 cm long from which a flat seed is produced that is distributed by the wind. The seed takes a long time to germinate.The plant requires well drained soil and prefers to stay dry during the winter time. It also likes to be kept rootbound.
It was first discovered in
Queensland in the McIlwraith andTozer Range byFrederick Manson Bailey . The plant was named after William David Kerr Macgillivray, who collected the type specimen.References
*CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE FLORA OF QUEENSLAND Queensland Agricultural Journal Vol. 1 p. 190 ,F.M. Bailey,(1914)
*"Mullins 1986">Mullins, Effie. (1986). " [http://www.anbg.gov.au/gnp/gnp13/hoya-macgillivrayi.html Hoya macgillivrayi] ". Growing Native Plants, Australian National Botanic Gardens. Accessed online: 28 February 2008.
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