Goodenia azurea, commonly known as blue goodenia,[1] is a species of flowering plant in the family Goodeniaceae and is endemic to northern Australia. It is an erect, dense, spreading or sprawling, glaucous, perennial herb with egg-shaped leaves with the narrower end towards the base, racemes or thyrses of bluish-purple flowers with leaf-like bracts, and oval to cylindrical fruit.
Goodenia azurea is an erect, dense, spreading or sprawling, perennial herb that typically grows to a height of and has glaucous foliage. The leaves are egg-shaped with the narrower end towards the base and irregular teeth on the edges, up to long and wide. The flowers are arranged in racemes or thyrses up to long on a peduncle long with leaf-like bracteoles at the base, each flower on a pedicel long. The sepals are lance-shaped, long and the corolla is bluish-purple, long, the lower lobes of the corolla long with wings wide. Flowering occurs from April to October and the fruit is an oval to cylindrical capsule long.[2]
Goodenia azurea was first formally described in 1859 by Ferdinand von Mueller in Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae.[3] [4]
In 2006 Leigh William Sage and David Edward Albrecht described two subspecies and the names are accepted at the Australian Plant Census:
The specific epithet (azurea) means "azure" or "deep blue"[8] and the subspecies name hesperia means "western".
Blue goodenia grows in sandy soil with lateritic pebbles in northern central Australia. Subspecies azurea is found in far western Queensland, central Northern Territory and central north-eastern Western Australia.[9] Subspecies hesperia is endemic to Western Australia where it occurs in the Great Sandy Desert, Gibson Desert, Great Victoria Desert, Gascoyne, Pilbara, Dampierland and Ord Victoria Plain bioregions of that state.
Goodenia azurea is classified as "not threatened" by the Western Australian Government Department of Parks and Wildlife, and as of "least concern" under the Queensland Government Nature Conservation Act 1992.[10] Both subspecies are classified as "not threatened" in Western Australia. Subspecies azurea is listed as of "least concern" under the Northern Territory Government Territory Parks and Wildlife Conservation Act 1976.