Species
Hedychium gardnerianum
Common Name(s)
Wild Ginger, Kahili Ginger
Authority
Hedychium gardnerianum Ker Gawl.
Family
Zingiberaceae
Flora Category
Vascular - Exotic
HEDGAR
The
National Vegetation Survey (NVS) Databank is a physical archive and electronic databank containing records of over 94,000 vegetation survey plots - including data from over 19,000 permanent plots. NVS maintains a standard set of species code abbreviations that correspond to standard scientific plant names from the Ngä Tipu o Aotearoa - New Zealand Plants database.
Structural Class
Monocotyledonous Herbs
Habitat
Terrestrial. Forests, regenerating forest, streamside and alluvial forest, forest light gaps and gullies. Prefers moderate to high fertility, not found in very dry or rocky areas.
Features
Non-woody perennial to 2 m tall, ginger-scented. Rhizomes massive, taro-like, close to ground surface, long, shallow rooted, much-branched, growing over each other, forming deep beds. Rhizome segments 4 x 10 cm, each producing an aerial stem usually annually. Stems to 2 m, erect, soft, unbranched, thickening to short pinkish collar at base. Leaves alternate, 20-45 x 10-15 cm, shiny, slightly hanging. Flowerhead 25-45 cm tall with many flowers, Jan-Mar. Flowers lemon-yellow with conspicuous red stamens, fragrant. Fruiting spike with fleshy orange fruits, 15-20 mm long, containing many bright scarlet seeds.
Similar Taxa
Similar to H. flavescens (yellow ginger), Zingiber spectabile (cullinary ginger) and Canna spp. but the leaves of H. gardnerianum are much broader than other gingers, and the tall flower heads of H. gardnerianum make it distinctive from Canna spp.
Flowering
January, February, March
Flower Colours
Red / Pink,Yellow
Year Naturalised
1940
Origin
India Himalayan region
Reason For Introduction
Ornamental
Life Cycle Comments
Perennial. The flower is hermaphrodite (Timmins & MacKenzie 1995).
Reproduction
In addition to regenerating from seed, it reproduces vegetatively from short stout rhizomes.
Seed
Up to 100 seeds are produced per flowerhead.
Dispersal
Seed is dispersed by birds, in particular tuis and blackbirds (Landcare Research 4/93). Rhizome fragments and seed are also spread by humans and water and soil disturbance.
Tolerances
Tolerant of frost and moderate shade (Seedlings require semi-shade) and slightly tolerant of drought, requires medium to high soil fertility. Flourishes on damp silt. Physical damage results in multiplication of rhizome pieces.
This page last updated on 18 Feb 2010