feb 28 2024

Hi all @donna0653 @alibun @cookymonster65 @jolanalan
this is scrambled notses for todays survey group. we will need some of the links so dont worry if it seems a mess.

(Happy other Birthday Dad - he would be 100 today, tomorrow he would be 25)

https://www.inaturalist.org/comments?mine=true

Melaleuca glumacea jurien area
Think I need to sort out some of these Notes. From A.A. Burbidge, A taxonomic revision of Beaufortia (Myrtaceae: Melaleuceae). Nuytsia Vol. 27 (2016) Beaufortia purpurea can be distinguished from B. eriocephala by having glabrous leaves and bracts, and a less-woolly inflorescence. It appears to be closely related to B. bracteosa but separated by having larger, more flattened leaves and larger, trullate to more-narrowly triangular bracts.Notes. In the northern part of its range, B. bracteosa is most likely to be confused with B. kwongkanicola A.A.Burb., which has larger flowers, pale pink to yellow brown petals (red in B. bracteosa), and five to seven free filaments that emerge from the staminal claw at different points. Beaufortia elegans and B. aestiva have glabrous staminal claws (silky to villous on inner surface in B. bracteosa). Beaufortia schaueri has pink flowers, while B. puberula has pink to red flowers but has hairy leaves (sometimes only the juvenile leaves). Beaufortia bracteosa appears to be related to B. purpurea, but has smaller leaves and broader bracts.
Plants at the western edge of the range, e.g. Wandoo National Park, have persistent, pilose bracteoles that give buds and flowers a more woolly appearance
Notes. Beaufortia eriocephala appears to be related to B. purpurea, but has woolly inflorescences,villous bracts, and ciliate to hirsute younger leaves (glabrous in B. purpurea), which are narrower
than in B. purpurea (<1 mm wide vs 1.5–4.5 mm wide in B. purpurea).


Gastrolobium racemosum
Glabrous inflorescence, reticulated venation, apricot, red yellow flower, long terminal inflorescence.
fitzgerald river
_---------

Florabase have it as Beaufortia kwongkanicola but name may have changed
now on inaturalist .
I've added it as a deviation from POWO for now


I think it is rhodanthe condensata. It matches "web photos" but none that I would absolutely trust (some named this are actually grevillea and another is Rhodanthe chlorocephala). We will have to have a look next wednesday...
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/132936562
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/69122429

Posted by you 3 days ago


Flora of Australia: vascular plants: Species of Hovea
By: I.R.Thompson
5
Leaves typically inserted on the branch at an angle of 45-90 degrees, petiole to 0.5 mm long; seeds mottledHovea pungens
5
Leaves typically inserted on the branch at an angle of less than 45 degrees, petiole 0.7-1.5 mm long; seeds uniformly colouredHovea stricta

Posted by you 3 days ago

The only pics of striata that look like leaves less than 45 deg are the ones on POWO https://powo.science.kew.org/taxon/urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:498700-1/images
Pungens may be sharper harder tip, but I don’t know
dandaragan


eremaea project


This is Gompholobium laxum. It is recognised in ALA and also in FloraBase but does not appear to be in the iNaturalist list of recognised names. @thebeachcomber

Posted by devito about 1 month ago

Publicado el 28 de febrero de 2024 a las 12:03 AM por margl margl

Comentarios

No hay comentarios aún.

Añade un comentario

Entra o Regístrate para añadir comentarios