Gastrolobium formosum explained

Gastrolobium formosum is a small, trailing shrub, with red flowers, in the pea family (Fabaceae), which grows up to a metre high, on clays and loam in swamps and along river banks.[1] The inflorescence consists of head of four unstalked flowers which is sheathed by a whorl of large bracts, with the flower petals being obscured by the lower calyx lobes. The standard petal is less than on third the keel petal. It is native to the south-west of Western Australia.[2]

It was first described as Jansonia formosa by Richard Kippist in 1847,[3] with a more detailed description by Kippist in 1851.[4] It was transferred to the genus, Gastrolobium in 2002 by Chandler, Crisp, Cayzer, and Bayer.[5]

The specific epithet, formosum, is a Latin adjective, formosus -a, -um, which describes the plant as "well-formed", "handsome", or "beautiful".[6]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Spooner, A.. 2004-02-11. FloraBase—the Western Australian Flora: Gastrolobium formosa. 2020-08-26. florabase.dpaw.wa.gov.au. Western Australian Herbarium, Biodiversity and Conservation Science. en.
  2. Web site: Gastrolobium formosa occurrence data. 2020-08-26. avh.ala.org.au. en-AU.
  3. Kippist, R.. 1847. A new genus of Leguminous plants, Jansonia. The Gardeners' Chronicle and Agricultural Gazette . 19. 307.
  4. Kippist. R.. 1851. On Jansonia, a new Genus of Leguminosæ, from Western Australia. Transactions of the Linnean Society of London. 20. 384.
  5. Chandler, G.T., Crisp, M.D., Cayzer, L.W. & Bayer, R.J. . 2002. Monograph of Gastrolobium (Fabaceae: Mirbelieae). Australian Systematic Botany. 15. 5. 697–698, Figs 25, 128. 10.1071/SB01010.
  6. Web site: formosus,-a,-um. 2020-08-26. www.plantillustrations.org.