Puneet Varma (Editor)

Cordyline banksii

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Clade
  
Monocots

Family
  
Asparagaceae

Scientific name
  
Cordyline banksii

Clade
  
Angiosperms

Order
  
Asparagales

Subfamily
  
Lomandroideae

Rank
  
Species

Cordyline banksii Cordyline Banksii New Zealand Tramper

Similar
  
Cordyline pumilio, Cordyline indivisa, Cordyline obtecta, Cordyline australis, Cordyline stricta

Cordyline banksii electric pink sprilecpink electric pink grass tree


Cordyline banksii (forest cabbage tree, tī ngahere) is a monocot tree endemic to New Zealand. The specific epithet banksii refers to the 18th-century botanist Joseph Banks.

Contents

Cordyline banksii Cordyline australis photography New Zealand cabbage tree

Distribution

Cordyline banksii httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Cordyline banksii tolerates a wide variety of habitats. It is common in coastal, lowland, and lower montane forests in the North Island, widespread in the northern half of the South Island and Westland as far south as Haast. It has occasionally been reported from coastal Fiordland, but these sightings are unsubstantiated. It also occasionally occurs in subalpine regions in the South Island. In shrublands it occurs with Cordyline pumilio and may form hybrids with it.

Description

Cordyline banksii Cordyline banksii

Tī ngahere is a sparingly-branched cabbage tree up to 4 metres (13 ft) tall. The leaves are lanceolate (somewhat paddle-shaped), up to 2 metres (6 ft 7 in)long and from 40–80 millimetres (1.6–3.1 in) wide. The leaves are broad in the mid portion and droop from there. A prominent flat midrib runs the whole length of the leaf. The fruiting panicle is up to 2 metres in length. The flowers are white and pleasantly perfumed. The globe-shaped fruit are up to 5 millimetres (0.20 in) in diameter, and are white, bluish-white, or blue.

Threats

Cordyline banksii TERRAIN Taranaki Educational Resource Research Analysis

C. banksii is not regarded as threatened. Unlike C. australis it seems to be resistant to a disease called "sudden decline", caused by the pathogen Phytoplasma australiense.

Cultivation

Cordyline banksii Cordyline banksii Oratia Native Plant Nursery

C. banksii is easy to grow. Fresh seed takes readily, and cuttings taken from the stems and trunk and shoots root quickly. It is rarer in cultivation than C. australis but is available from many nurseries and garden centres, often as a purple-leaved cultivar. Useful for steep slopes or poorly drained situations. The plant is hardy in USDA zones 10a and 11.

Cordyline banksii Cordyline banksii Images Video Information

References

Cordyline banksii Wikipedia