Androcalva leiperi, also known as Leiper's commersonia,[1] is a species of flowering plant in the family Malvaceae and is endemic to a restricted part of south-east Queensland. It is an erect or prostrate shrub that has brown bark, lance-shaped leaves with 4 to 7 pairs of rounded serrations on the edges, and groups of 3 to 12 white flowers.
Androcalva leiperi is an erect or prostrate shrub that typically grows to high and wide, and that forms suckers. Its bark is brown, its branchlets covered with golden, star-shaped hairs. The leaves are lance-shaped, long and wide on a petiole long with narrowly triangular stipules long at the base. The edges of the leaves have 4 to 7 pairs of rounded serrations on the edges and both surfaces of the leaves are covered with golden, star-shaped hairs. The flowers are arranged in groups of 3 to 12 on a peduncle long, each flower on a pedicel long, with bracts long at the base. The flowers are pink in the bud stage, then white and in diameter with 5 petal-like sepals, the lobes long. The petals are long, the middle lobe egg-shaped and the side lobes rounded. Flowering has been recorded in February and April.[2] [3]
This species was first formally described in 2006 by Gordon Guymer who gave it the name Commersonia leiperi in the journal Austrobaileya from specimens collected near Childers in 1996.[4] In 2011, Carolyn Wilkins and Barbara Whitlock transferred the species to Androcalva as A. leiperi in Australian Systematic Botany.[5] The specific epithet (leiperi) honours Glenn Leiper, who discovered the species and has cultivated it in Beenleigh.
Androcalva leiperi grows in woodland and open forest in a restricted area just south of Bundaberg and south-west of Maryborough in Queensland.