Angelonia angustifolia
Common name(s): angelonia, monkey face, narrowleaf angelon, willowleaf angelon
Habit: herb
Description:
Genus: "Erect, creeping, or climbing herbs, rarely shrubs, pilose or viscid-pubescent, sometimes glabrate; leaves opposite or verticillate (or distal ones alternate), essentially sessile, the blades oblong or lanceolate; inflorescences terminal racemes or flowers solitary or paired in leaf axils; flowers zygomorphic; calyx deeply 5-lobed, without bracteoles at base; corolla subrotate to 2-lipped, the limb widely cupuliform, short-spurred, 5-lobed, the lobes spreading, 4 of them broad and flat, the lower one cupuliform in lower half, the throat broadened into a saclike cup; stamens 4, borne on dorsal side of cupuliform part of corolla limb, the filaments short, thick, curved, the anthers 2-locular; ovary globose or ovoid, the style subulate, the stigma capitate; capsule globose or ellipsoid, loculicidally 2-valved, rarely indehiscent."
Species: "Perennial herb to to cm high...; the corolla is blue or purplish or sometimes is noted as white. (Smith, 1991; p. 77).
Habitat/ecology: In Fiji, "cultivated in gardens and locally naturalized from near sea level to about 550 m" (Smith, 1991; p. 77). In New Caledonia, "est cultivé et parfois naturalisé" (MacKee, 1994; p. 128).
Propagation: Seed
Native range: "Mexico, Central America, and West Indies, cultivated elsewhere...and sometimes naturalizing" (Smith, 1991; p. 77).
http://www.hear.org/pier/species/angelonia_angustifolia.htm