Erica recurvata is a critically endangered South African species of Cape heath.
E. recurvata is a shrub of some NaNcm (-2,147,483,648inches) in height. It has dense whorls of small needle-like leaves which are pale green to grey-green in colour, and recurving in habit, hence the specific name. Clusters of sticky, pendulous flowers appear in winter, having white sepals, dark brown to almost black corollas, and with long, red, exserted styles.
First known from a botanical painting by Henry Cranke Andrews in the late 1700s, the species was rediscovered when it was found flowering near Napier in 2007. It belongs to the small Oxyloma section of Ericas. All three members having strongly exserted styles and including anthers.[1] [2]
Its distribution is limited to a small area in rocky, mountainous terrain on the Overberg where it grows in crevices between sandstone boulders.[3]