Northeastern Asian Flora
Log In New Account Sitemap
  • Home
  • Search
    • Search Collections
    • Map Search
  • Images
    • Image Browser
    • Search Images
  • Inventories
  • Interactive Tools
    • Dynamic Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
Spiraea nipponica Maxim.   (redirected from: Spiraea nipponica f. oblanceolata (Nakai) Ohwi)
Family: Rosaceae
[Spiraea bracteata Hook.f., moreSpiraea bracteata var. tosaensis (Yatabe) Makino, Spiraea dissomorpha Koidz., Spiraea media var. rotimdifolia G.Nicholson, Spiraea nipponica f. oblanceolata (Nakai) Ohwi, Spiraea nipponica f. rotundifoiia (G.Nicholson) Makino, Spiraea nipponica var. oblanceolata Nakai, Spiraea nipponica var. ogawae (Nakai) T.Yamanaka, Spiraea nipponica var. rotundifoiia (G.Nicholson) Makino, Spiraea nipponica var. tosaensis (Yatabe) Makino, Spiraea ogawai Nakai, Spiraea tosaensis Yatabe]
Images
not available
  • Japan Flora
  • Resources
Japan Flora: Shrub; branches angled, glabrous; leaves chartaceous, narrowly ob­long to obovate-orbicular, usually elliptic to broadly so, 1-25 cm. long, 7-15 mm. wide, rounded to very obtuse at apex, entire or with few obtuse teeth on upper margin, glabrous, glaucous beneath, the petioles 1.5-4 mm. long, glabrous; in­florescence terminal on short branchlets, glabrous or nearly so, usually with slighdy developed axis, rather many-flowered; pedicels 1-1.5 cm. long; flowers white, 6-7 mm. across; calyx glabrous, the teeth deltoid, erect, acute, brown-pube犯ent within; petals orbicular, nearly as long as the stamens; fruiting carpels more or less brown-pubescent to nearly glabrous. May-July. Mountains.

Honshu (Kinki Dish1, and eastw.).             

f. rotundifolia Makino, broader leaves.

f. oblanceolata (Nakai) Ohwi. narrower leaves.

Var. tosaensis (Yatabe) Makino. S. tosaensis Yatabe---------------

Tosa-shimotsuke. Leaves broadly to narrowly oblanceo­late, 1.5-3 cm. long, 3-8 mm. wide, entire or 2- or 3-toothed near the apex. May. Mountains; Shikoku.

Spiraea nipponica
Open Interactive Map
Click to Display
0 Total Images

Development supported by College of Agriculture and Life Sciences of Seoul
National University and Korea National Arboretum of Korea Forest Service.
Powered by Symbiota.