Hebe ‘Green Globe’

Hebe ‘Green Globe’, Heene Cemetery, October 2025

Species introduction

At a glance
Latin name: 
Hebe ‘Green Globe’
Family: 
Plantain
Family Latin name: 
Plantaginaceae
Category: 
Flowering Plants

Species description

Species description

Hebe ‘Green Globe’ (one of a wide selection of plants shown here), planted in the Memorial Garden in October 2025, is a compact, rounded small shrub (perhaps 40 centimetres tall and wide) with upright stems and tightly-packed emerald-green cup-shaped leaves.

Short spikes of dainty white flowers are produced in early summer, which are attractive to pollinating insects.

Species photographs

Larger photograph(s) (click to magnify)
Stock species image
Hebe 'Green Globe' courtesy of Paramount Plants.

Hebe 'Green Globe' courtesy of Paramount Plants.

Details

Species family information

Many members have flat leaves that seem to lay on the ground, hence the derivation of the name from the Latin 'planta', sole of the foot. The flowers are on long, leafless stalks. The best known plantain is the banana.

Category information

Nucleic multicellular photosynthetic organisms lived in freshwater communities on land as long ago as a thousand million years, and their terrestrial descendants are known from the late Pre-Cambrian 850 million years ago. Embryophyte land plants are known from the mid Ordovician, and land plant structures such as roots and leaves are recognisable in mid Devonian fossils. Seeds seem to have evolved by the late Devonian. The Embryophytes are green land plants that form the bulk of the Earth’s vegetation. They have specialised reproductive organs and nurture the young embryo sporophyte. Most obtain their energy by photosynthesis, using sunlight to synthesise food from Carbon Dioxide and Water.

The earliest known plant group is the Archaeplastida, which were autotrophic. Listing just the surviving descendants, which evolved in turn, we have the Red Algae, the Chlorophyte Green Algae, the Charophyte Green Algae, and then the Embryophyta or land plants. The earliest embryophytes were the Liverworts, followed by the Hornworts, and the Mosses. Then we have the Vascular Plants, the Lycophytes and Ferns, followed by the Spermatophytes or seed plants, the Gnetophytes, Conifers, Ginkgos, and Cycads, and finally the Magnoliophyta (Angiosperms) or flowering plants.