Dwarf Jasmine is a rare and endangered dwarf,
prostrate, dome-shaped evergreen shrub, 20-30 cm tall, slender,
sprawling or sagging on rocky-slopes or stone walls. Flowers are bright
yellow, tubular, 5-lobed, flower tubes 1.3-1.4 cm long, petals 8-9 mm
long, oblong, ovate. Stamens 2, long, inserted the at middle of flower
tube. Style is 1.5 cm long, thread-like; stigma club-shaped. Calyx
green, 5-lobed, 2-3 mm long, sepals linear, hairless, green. Flowers
are brone in cymes in leaf-axils and at branch-ends. Cymes are 1.9-2.2
cm long, stalked. Flower-stalks are 1-3 mm long, hairless. Stems are
densely crowded, branched, crooked, verrucose and woody; twigs green,
striped, rough. Leaves are alternate, estipulate, stalked, pinnately
compound, 3-5 foliolate, imparipinnate, 7-15 mm long; axis and
leaf-stalks narrowly winged; leaf-stalks 2-4 mm long; leaflets nearly
stalkless, obovate, hairless, thickly leathery. Leaflets tip has a
short sharp point. Lateral leaflets 3-4 x 2-3 mm, end leaflet 3-6 2-3
mm, nerves indistinct. Fruit is a berry, ellipsoid, 3-4 mm in diameter,
hairless and shining. Dwarf Jasmine is endemic to western Himalayas,
Himachal Pradesh, Chamba district, Bharmour subdivision. Flowering:
May-July.
Identification credit: Amber Srivastava
Photographed in Botanical Survey of India, Dehradun.
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The flower labeled Dwarf Jasmine is ...