Name
Classifications and Characteristics
Plant Division | Angiosperms (Flowering Seed Plants) (Dicotyledon) |
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Plant Growth Form | Shrub |
Mode of Nutrition | Autotrophic |
Maximum Height | 0.6 m |
Maximum Plant Spread / Crown Width | 0.6 m |
Description and Ethnobotany
Growth Form | An erect to spreading, low-branching, compact, free-flowering subshrub with finely-textured leaves, up to 0.4 m to 0.6 m in height, spreading up to 0.6 m across. |
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Foliage | Leaves simple, subsessile (with slight stalks), opposite, pinnately-veined, oblong, sometimes elliptic, glossy, medium to dark green, 10 to 30 mm long, 1.5 to 4 mm wide, with pubescent (covered with hair) undersides. |
Stems | Multi-branched, puberulent (covered with soft, fine hairs) and reddish strigose (appressed stiff hairs). |
Flowers | Flowers solitary in the axils of new leaves, trumpet-shaped, pedicels 2 to 7 mm long; petals 6, pink, 3 to 3.5 mm long; sepals crinkled, rarely absent; calyx 5 to 8 mm long; floral tube pale green, sometimes turning pinkish toward apex, glabrous or slightly pubescent. |
Fruit | Fruit capsules dehiscent, leathery or berrylike, oblong-ovoid, 1-celled, up to 3.5 mm long, containing numerous seeds; seeds reddish brown, suborbicular, 1 to 1.5mm in diameter, pitted. |
Cultivation | Tolerates many soil types but requires ample moisture to become established in full sun or semi-shade. Prefers well-drained fertile soils with frequent light fertilizations. When plant becomes scraggly, tips can be pinched to incorporate vigour and to attain lush growth and more blooms. Easily propagated by softwood cuttings. Obtaining new plants from seed is difficult due to very poor germination rate. Plant also reproduces by layering, whereby the horizontal branches touch the ground and set roots. |
Etymology | The genus epithet ‘Cuphea’ comes from the Greek word kyphos, means curved, in reference to the shape of the seed capsules. The species epithet ‘hyssopifolia’ refers to the shape of the leaves which are like those of the herb Hyssop. Not a true heather, the leaves resemble to those of Scotch heather (Calluna vulgaris), thus derived its common name false heather. |
Landscaping Features
Desirable Plant Features | Ornamental Flowers |
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Fauna, Pollination and Dispersal
Fauna Pollination Dispersal Associated Fauna | Bee-Attracting |
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Plant Care and Propagation
Light Preference | Full Sun |
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Water Preference | Moderate Water |
Foliar
Mature Foliage Colour(s) | Green |
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Leaf Area Index (LAI) for Green Plot Ratio | 4.5 (Shrub & Groundcover - Dicot) |
Floral (Angiosperm)
Flower Colour(s) | Pink |
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Image Repository
Others
Master ID | 603 |
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Species ID | 1898 |
Flora Disclaimer | The information in this website has been compiled from reliable sources, such as reference works on medicinal plants. It is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment and NParks does not purport to provide any medical advice. Readers should always consult his/her physician before using or consuming a plant for medicinal purposes. |