Oxera

Genus of flowering plants


title: "Oxera" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["lamiaceae", "lamiaceae-genera", "flora-of-new-caledonia", "flora-of-vanuatu", "taxonomy-articles-created-by-polbot"] description: "Genus of flowering plants" topic_path: "general/lamiaceae" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxera" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Genus of flowering plants ::

| image = Oxera puchella.jpg | image_caption = Oxera pulchella | taxon = Oxera | authority = Labill. | type_species = Oxera pulchella | type_species_authority = Labill. | synonyms_ref = | synonyms =

  • Oncoma Spreng.
  • Borya Montrouz. ex Beauvis. 1901 not Labill. 1805 nor Willd. 1806
  • Faradaya F.Muell.
  • Maoutia Montrouz., non Maoutia Wedd.
  • Schizopremna Baill.

Oxera is a genus of flowering plants in the family Lamiaceae native to islands in the southwestern Pacific and Australia.

Description

Species of Oxera show a variety of growth forms, including lianas, shrubs and trees. The leaves are simple, and are petiolate (on short stalks), except in O. sessilifolia, with entire or occasionally sinuate (wavy) edges.

The inflorescences are loose thyrses of flowers, growing from leaf axils (axillary) or directly from the stem (cauliflory). The flowers are large, conspicuous and bisexual; the calyx is actinomorphic (rotationally symmetrical), but the corolla is zygomorphic, sometimes strongly so. Although some species have four stamens in each flower, they are usually reduced in number with two stamens, usually the posterior pair, forming staminodes instead.

Distribution

Twenty of the twenty-one species are found on the island of Grande Terre (the main island of New Caledonia). Three species occur on the adjacent island of Île des Pins, two on Lifou and one on Maré in the Loyalty Islands, and two on Vanuatu (including one introduced species).

Oxera vanuatuensis is only known from Vanuatu, where it is only known from cultivated specimens. Villagers on Pentecost Island (and their descendants on Maewo call the tree harongmau, and propagate the species by planting seeds, transplanting seedlings or taking cuttings. The plant is thought to treat illnesses caused by black magic, and profuse flowering from the trunk is thought to foretell a good harvest of yams.

Species

Twenty-one species are recognised in the genus Oxera, in five informal species groups: ;baladica group

Taxonomic history

The genus Oxera was erected by French voyager and botanist Jacques Labillardière in 1824, based on a single specimen that he had collected in New Caledonia. The closest relative of Oxera is the genus Faradaya, and the two genera were once united as the tribe Oxereae. Collectively, they are the sister group to a clade containing Clerodendrum and a number of segregate genera such as Kalaharia, Huxleya, Amasonia and Tetraclea. Both genera are now treated as members of the subfamily Teucrioideae, following work published by Philip D. Cantino in 1992.

Notes

References

References

  1. "''Oxera'' Labill.".
  2. (2004). "Flowering plants, Dicotyledons. Lamiales (except Acanthaceae including Avicenniaceae)". [[Springer Science+Business Media.
  3. V. Hecquet. (2010). "''Oxera balansae''".
  4. T. Jaffré. (1998). "''Oxera crassifolia''".
  5. V. Hecquet. (2010). "''Oxera pulchella''".
  6. [[David Mabberley. (2004). "Hippocrateaceae, Labiatae, Vitaceae". Association de Botanique Tropicale.
  7. T. Jaffré. (1998). "''Oxera macrocalyx''".
  8. R. P. J. de Kok & [[David Mabberley. (1999). "A synopsis of ''Oxera'' Labill. (Labiatae)". [[Kew Bulletin]].
  9. Dorothy A. Steane, Rogier P. J. de Kok & Richard G. Olmstead. (2010). "Phylogenetic relationships between ''Clerodendrum'' (Lamiaceae) and other Ajugoid genera inferred from nuclear and chloroplast DNA sequence data". [[Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution]].
  10. Yao-Wu Yuan, [[David Mabberley. (2010). "Further disintegration and redefinition of ''Clerodendrum'' (Lamiaceae): implications for the understanding of the evolution of an intriguing breeding strategy". [[Taxon (journal).

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