Centrolepis aristata explained

Centrolepis aristata, commonly known as pointed centrolepis, is a species of plant in the Restionaceae family and is found in areas of southern Australia.

Description

The annual herb has a tufted habit and typically grows to a height of 2to. It is a bright green colour becoming reddish after it flowers. The shiny, glabrous, thin, pointed leaves are typically 6cm (02inches) in length with a width of 1.6mm.[1] It flowers between August and December. The flower heads have a flattened oblong-ovoid shape and are around 32NaN2 wide. the flowers have a brown base and two long opposite primary bracts.[1] Between 6-22 flowers form in a terminal cluster, the flowers have a brown to yellowish colour.[2] Brown ovoid fruit follow that contain small soft seeds.[1] The seeds are fusiform and 0.6to long.[3]

Classification

The species was first formally described by the botanist Robert Brown and then by Johann Jacob Roemer and Josef August Schultes in 1817 in the work Systema Vegetabilium.[4]

Distribution

It is found among rocky outcrops and in winter wet depressions in the Mid West, Wheatbelt, South West, Great Southern and Goldfields-Esperance regions of Western Australia where it grows in damp sandy-clay-loam soils over granite. In South Australia it is found along much of the south coast, all of the Eyre Peninsula and Yorke Peninsula, through all of the south east and as far north as the Flinders Ranges.[1] The plant is also found in New South Wales, Victoria[2] and Tasmania.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Centrolepis aristata (Centrolepidaceae) Pointed Centrolepis. Seeds of South Australia. 20 August 2017. Government of South Australia.
  2. Web site: Centrolepis aristata. 20 August 2017. Yarra Ranges Shire Council. 2009.
  3. Web site: Centrolepis aristata (R.Br.) Roem. & Schult.. 20 August 2017. PlantNET. Royal Botanic Garden, Sydney.
  4. Web site: Centrolepis aristata (R.Br.) Roem. & Schult.. 20 August 2017. Atlas of Living Australia. Global Biodiversity Information Facility.