Acacia acanthaster is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is a rigid, densely-branched, domed shrub with flat, linear phyllodes, spherical heads of golden-yellow flowers, and curved pods that resemble a string of beads.
Acacia acanthaster is a rigid, densely-branched, domed shrub that typically grows to high and wide. Its branchlets are glabrous, and divided near the ends into a few short, radiating, leafless spines. The phyllodes are glabrous, flat and linear, long and wide. Between 18 and 27 golden-yellow flowers are arranged in 1 or 2 spherical heads long on a peduncle long. Flowering occurs from August to October and the pods are curved or loosely coiled, long, wide and resemble a string of beads. The seeds are elliptic, about long and have a white, club-shaped aril.[1] [2] [3]
Acacia acanthaster was first formally described by the botanist Bruce Maslin in 1999 in the journal Nuytsia from specimens collected about north-east of Norseman from specimens collected by Kenneth Newbey in 1980.[4] In 2006, Leslie Pedley transferred the species to Racosperma as R. acanthaster, but that name is considered a synonym of A. acanthaster by the Australian Plant Census. The specific epithet (acanthaster) means "a prickly star", referring to the spines on the ends of the branchlets.[5]
This shrub grows in sandy soil, clay or loam on granite outcrop, hills and plains in disjunct places between Dumbleyung, Lake King and Narembeen, and near the type location, near Sinclair Soak, in the Avon Wheatbelt, Coolgardie and Mallee bioregions in the south-west of Western Australia.