Glandularia laciniata (L.) Schnack & Covas

Annual herb with creeping stems that root at the nodes. Leaves to 2.5 cm wide, ovate, 3-parted or variously cut. Flower cluster a dense terminal head. Flowers reddish to violet. [V. erinoides Lam.]

S America

 

V. officinalis L., Common Verbena (Vervain, Juno's Tears), from S Europe is a lanky perennial herb sometimes to 1m tall, stems 4-angled with rough edges. Upper leaves to about 6 cm long, deeply cut, rough. Lower leaves small and more or less entire. Flower clusters in elongating, dense, branched spikes; spring to summer. Flowers twice as long as the calyx, lilac to pink with a tube to 3.5 mm long. Widely naturalised on disturbed and waste ground.

V. peruviana (L.) Britt. from Argentina to S Brazil is a creeping perennial herb with upright branches. Leaves to 5 cm long, more or less ovate, saw-toothed or roundtoothed, rough. Flower clusters long-stalked, dense. Flowers red. [V. chamaedrifolia Juss.] V. 'Alba' Flowers white.

V. tenera Spreng. from Argentina to Brazil is a shrubby, tufted perennial herb. Leaves to 2.5 cm long, lobed, hairy. Flower clusters elongating. Flowers reddish violet.

V. tenuisecta Briq., Moss Verbena, from S America is a perennial creeping or scrambling herb to about 0.5 m tall. Leaves triangular in outline, to 4 cm long, 3 cm wide, hairy at first, divided into fine linear segments with margins rolled under. Flower clusters terminal, sometimes with a flat-topped head; spring to early summer. Flowers white, violet or purple, the tube 1-1.5 cm long. Widely naturalised inland weed found along roadsides and on wasteland.

Source: Spencer, R. (2002). Verbenaceae. In: Spencer, R.. Horticultural Flora of South-eastern Australia. Volume 4. Flowering plants. Dicotyledons. Part 3. The identification of garden and cultivated plants. University of New South Wales Press. (as Verbena laciniata)

kingdom Plantae
phylum   Tracheophyta
class    Magnoliopsida
superorder     Asteranae
order      Lamiales
family       Verbenaceae
genus        Glandularia