Page:Manual of the New Zealand Flora.djvu/228

188 regular, hermaphrodite or unisexual, axillary, solitary or in cymes or racemes. Calyx-tube short or long; lobes 4–5, valvate or imbricate. Petals as many as the calyx-lobes or wanting, inserted on the calyx-tube, free or connate. Corona of one or more rows of filamentous appendages arising from the calyx-tube, rarely wanting. Stamens 3–5, rarely more, usually springing from the base of the calyx, but filaments often monadelphous and adnate to the stalk of the ovary to near the top. Ovary superior, free, elevated on a stalk (gynophore) or sessile, 1-celled, with 3–5 parietal placentas; styles 3–5 or single; ovules numerous, pendulous, anatropous. Fruit succulent or capsular. Seeds numerous, ovoid or compressed, often arillate; albumen fleshy; embryo straight, cotyledons flat.

Climbing shrubs. Leaves simple or palmately lobed or divided, often with glands on the undersurface and petiole; tendrils axillary. Flowers axillary, solitary or racemose. Calyx-tube short, lobes 4–5. Petals 4–5, rarely wanting, inserted on the throat of the calyx. Corona of one or several rings of coloured filaments arising from the calyx-tube. Stamens as many as the calyx-lobes; filaments adnate to the stalk of the ovary; anthers versatile. Ovary superior, elevated on a long stalk or gynophore, 1-celled; styles 3; stigmas capitate. Fruit succulent or pulpy, indehiscent or obscurely 3-valved.

1. P. tetrandra, Banks and Sol. ex D.C. Prodr. iii. 323.—A glabrous climber, ascending to the tops of the highest trees; trunk woody, often 3–4 in. diam.; branches slender, terete. Leaves alternate, petiolate, 1–4 in. long, oblong-lanceolate or ovate-lanceolate, acuminate, eglandular, quite entire, smooth and glossy; tendrils slender, elongated. Flowers unisexual, greenish, ½ in. diam., in 2–4-flowered cymes or solitary; pedicels slender, jointed about the middle. Calyx-lobes 4, oblong, obtuse. Petals the same number and about the same size. Corona of numerous yellowish filaments. Male flowers with 4 stamens; filaments long, diverging. Females with a stipitate ovary, usually with short barren stamens at the base; styles 2 or 3. Fruit nearly globose, orange, 1–1½ in.