Abstract
ABSTRACT Craspedia G.Forst., a genus of tribe Gnaphalieae (Compositae/Asteraceae), is confined to Australia and New Zealand. Twelve species, including Craspedia blepharia Breitw. & Courtney, which we are describing here, are now recognised in New Zealand. Craspedia blepharia is known only from Garibaldi Ridge in Nelson/Tasman, South Island of New Zealand. It is a strong calcicole, confined to exposed, vertical surfaces of limestone cliffs and dolines and quartzose sandstone cliffs which receive calcium-rich seep-water. Its rosettes grow either individually or in dense clumps on cliff faces, thus allowing the plants to receive water from surface water flow. It is distinguished from other New Zealand Craspedia by its rosette leaves clad with a hispid adaxially very dense and abaxially sparse indumentum of very long (2.2–3 mm), usually curved, uniseriate, multiseptate, usually slightly brown or colourless, translucent trichomes that may have a very thin curly, flagellate tip, and leaf margins with a thin white rim formed by the flagellate tips of these long, curved trichomes. We are providing the formal taxonomic treatment together with illustrations and descriptions of its morphology, distribution, habitat, ecology, phenology, and etymology, as well as an assessment of its conservation status.
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