Classification
 Nomenclature
Scientific Name:
Veronica maccaskillii (Allan) Heenan, New Zealand J. Bot. 50: 88 (2012)
Synonymy:
  • Hebe raoulii var. maccaskillii Allan, Trans. & Proc. Roy. Soc. New Zealand 69: 273 (1940)
  • Heliohebe raoulii subsp. maccaskillii (Allan) Garn.-Jones, New Zealand J. Bot. 31: 335-336 (1993)
  • Parahebe raoulii subsp. maccaskillii (Allan) Heads, Bot. J. Linn. Soc. 115: 82 (1994)
  • Veronica raoulii subsp. maccaskillii (Allan) Garn.-Jones in Garnock-Jones et al., Taxon 56: 578 (2007)
  • Heliohebe maccaskillii (Allan) D.A.Norton & Molloy, New Zealand J. Bot. 47: 406 (2009)
Lectotype (designated by Moore in Allan 1961): Weka Pass, L. W. McCaskill, Oct 1937, CHR 56575 A. Two syntypes were cited in the protologue, the other collected by R. M. Laing on limestone rocks at Whiterock (May 1913, CHR 10738). Both match the protologue equally well, but Allan specifically mentioned the "large suite of specimens" collected by McCaskill.
Etymology:
Named after Lancelot William McCaskill (1900–1985), soil conservationist and teacher at Lincoln College, Canterbury.
 Description

Sub-shrub or low shrub to 0.3 m tall. Stems prostrate to decumbent, almost divaricating, eglandular-pubescent; hairs uniform, short, reflexed, appressed. Leaf bud indistinct; leaves separating while very small, opposite-decussate, erecto-patent to spreading, separating early; lamina coriaceous, obovate to spathulate, 4–15 mm long, 2–7 mm wide, dull green to bronze-green above, dull bronze-green to yellowish-green beneath; midrib weakly evident; surfaces glabrous; margin glabrous, entire to shallowly crenate, teeth in 0–3 pairs; apex rounded or rarely obtuse; base cuneate; petiole 1–3 mm long. Inflorescence a terminal compound raceme, 15–30 mm long; flowers crowded, 10–60, all bisexual; bracts opposite, becoming alternate above, deltoid, > pedicels; pedicels erecto-patent, 0–0.5 mm long, densely eglandular-hairy all around. Calyx lobes usually 5, sometimes 4, the anterior pair fused about ⅔-way to apex or sometimes less, rounded to obtuse, 2–3 mm long, posterior 5th lobe about ½–⅔ as long as the others, eglandular-ciliate, or mixed eglandular- and glandular-ciliate. Corolla 5.0–9.5 mm diameter; tube white or pale purplish, 2–3 mm long, ≤ calyx, glabrous; lobes 4, white or pale purplish, erect to spreading, sub-equal, elliptic to narrowly rhomboid, 3.0–4.5 mm long, sub-acute to rounded; nectar guides absent. Stamen filaments white, 2.0–3.5 mm long; anthers pale yellow. Style glabrous or with a few hairs at base, 4–7 mm long. Capsules turgid or broadly angustiseptate, emarginate, glabrous or hairy at apex, 2.5–3.5 mm long, 2–3 mm at widest point. Seeds fusiform or irregular, weakly flattened, winged, smooth, straw-yellow to brown, 1.2–1.6 mm long.

 Recognition

Among the species of the sun hebe group, plants of V. hulkeana and V. lavaudiana can be distinguished by their larger leaves. V. raoulii plants are very similar in having the anterior calyx lobes fused, but distinguished by their more open and ascending to erect habit, with at least some longer internodes 5–8 mm (consistently < 5 mm in V. maccaskillii), larger, obovate to spathulate and more acute to acuminate leaves with more and deeper teeth, and only four calyx lobes. These differences are mostly quantitative, the only qualitative one being the fifth calyx lobe often seen in V. maccaskillii. Norton & Molloy (2009) report both species grow together on Mt Cass, North Canterbury, without obvious hybrids, and this sympatric occurrence was the reason they promoted V. raoulii subsp. maccaskillii to species rank (as Heliohebe maccaskillii).

V. scrupea plants differ in having four calyx lobes, and their leaves are narrower, more toothed, and more acute, their flowers are smaller with shorter stamens, and their anterior calyx lobes are free. V. pentasepala plants are taller and more erect, but similar in having five calyx lobes.

 Distribution

South Island: Canterbury (confined to a small area near Waipara and Rangiora, including Pyramid Valley, Waipara Gorge and nearby hills, Weka Pass, Whiterock, and Mt Cass).

 Habitat

Limestone gorges and ridges, rock outcrops. Recorded elevations range from 91 to 500 m.

 Biostatus
Indigenous (Endemic)
 Phenology

Flowers: October–November; fruits: December–January.

 Cytology

2n = 42 (Hair 1967, as Hebe raoulii var. maccaskillii).

 Notes

Veronica maccaskillii is classified in V. subg. Pseudoveronica sect. Hebe and informally in the “sun hebe” group (Albach & Meudt 2010). The morphology-based cladogram of Garnock-Jones (1993) suggests a close relationship with V. raoulii. DNA sequence data have not been studied.

V. maccaskillii was reported to grow with V. raoulii at Mt Cass, Canterbury, where hybrids between them were not seen (Norton & Molloy 2009, as Heliohebe). However, all calyces examined from Mt Cass specimens had free anterior lobes, so those specimens would not key out to either species in most keys. Sharing of this feature might indicate gene flow among all the plants at this locality.

 Bibliography
Albach, D.C.; Meudt, H.M. 2010: Phylogeny of Veronica in the Southern and Northern Hemispheres based on plastid, nuclear ribosomal and nuclear low-copy DNA. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 54: 457–471.
Allan, H.H. 1940: Notes on New Zealand floristic botany. Including descriptions of new species, etc. - No. 7. Transactions and Proceedings of the Royal Society of New Zealand 69: 270–282.
de Lange, P.J.; Norton, D.A.; Courtney, S.P.; Heenan, P.B.; Barkla, J.W.; Cameron, E.K.; Hitchmough, R.; Townsend, A.J. 2009: Threatened and uncommon plants of New Zealand (2008 revision). New Zealand Journal of Botany 47: 61–96. [as Heliohebe raoulii subsp. maccaskillii (Allan) Garn.-Jones] [Nationally Endangered]
de Lange, P.J.; Norton, D.A.; Heenan, P.B.; Courtney, S.P.; Molloy, B.P.J.; Ogle, C.C.; Rance, B.D. 2004: Threatened and uncommon plants of New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Botany 42(1): 45–76. [as Heliohebe raoulii subsp. maccaskillii (Allan) Garn.-Jones]
de Lange, P.J.; Rolfe, J.R.; Barkla J.W.; Courtney, S.P.; Champion, P.D.; Perrie, L.R.; Beadel, S.N.; Ford, K.A.; Breitwieser, I.; Schönberger, I.; Hindmarsh-Walls, R.; Heenan, P.B.; Ladley, K. 2018: Conservation status of New Zealand indigenous vascular plants, 2017. New Zealand Threat Classification Series. No. 22. [Nationally Endangered]
de Lange, P.J.; Rolfe, J.R.; Champion, P.D.; Courtney, S.P.; Heenan, P.B.; Barkla, J.W.; Cameron, E.K.; Norton, D.A.; Hitchmough, R.A. 2013: Conservation status of New Zealand indigenous vascular plants, 2012. New Zealand Threat Classification Series 3. Department of Conservation, Wellington. [as Heliohebe maccaskillii (Allan) D.A.Norton & Molloy] [Nationally Endangered]
Garnock-Jones, P.J. 1993: Heliohebe (Scrophulariaceae-Veroniceae), a new genus segregated from Hebe. New Zealand Journal of Botany 31: 323–339.
Garnock-Jones, P.J. 2023: Veronica. In: Breitwieser, I. (ed.) Flora of New Zealand – Seed Plants. Fascicle 9. Manaaki Whenua Press, Lincoln.
Garnock-Jones, P.J.; Albach, D.; Briggs, B.G. 2007: Botanical names in Southern Hemisphere Veronica (Plantaginaceae): sect. Detzneria, sect. Hebe, and sect. Labiatoides. Taxon 56: 571–582.
Garnock-Jones, P.J.; Lloyd, D.G. 2004: A taxonomic revision of Parahebe (Plantaginaceae) in New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Botany 42: 181–232. [as Heliohebe raoulii subsp. maccaskillii (Allan) Garn.-Jones; Parahebe raoulii subsp. maccaskillii (Allan) Heads]
Hair, J.B. 1967: Contributions to a chromosome atlas of the New Zealand flora — 10. Hebe (Scrophulariaceae). New Zealand Journal of Botany 5: 322–352.
Heads, M.J. 1994: A biogeographic review of Parahebe (Scrophulariaceae). Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 115: 65–89.
Heenan, P.B. 2012: Taxonomic notes on the New Zealand flora: new names in Veronica (Plantaginaceae). New Zealand Journal of Botany 50(1): 87–88.
Norton, D.A.; Molloy, B.P.J. 2009: Heliohebe maccaskillii (Plantaginaceae) — a new rank for a threatened limestone endemic, North Canterbury, New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Botany 47: 405–409.