Isopogon heterophyllus explained

Isopogon heterophyllus is a plant in the family Proteaceae and is endemic to the southwest of Western Australia. It is a shrub with simple or pinnate, cylindrical leaves and hairy, usually pink flowers.

Description

Isopogon heterophyllus is a shrub that typically grows to a height of with smooth brown or reddish brown branchlets. The leaves are up to about long, prickly, variably simple, pinnate or bipinnate, the segments up to long. The flowers are arranged in spherical, sessile heads about long in diameter on the ends of branchlets, each head with usually pink, sometimes lilac to mauve flowers up to about long, the heads with egg-shaped involucral bracts at the base. Flowering occurs from August to November and the fruit is a hairy nut up to long, fused in a cone-shaped to spherical head in diameter.[1]

Taxonomy and naming

Isopogon heterophyllus was first formally described in 1845 by Carl Meissner in Johann Georg Christian Lehmann's book Plantae Preissianae.[2] [3]

In 2017, Rye and Hislop proposed that I. heteropyllus is a synonym of Isopogon formosus subsp. formosus but their claim has not been assessed by the Australian Plant Census as at November 2020.[4] [5]

Distribution and habitat

This isopogon grows in open woodland and shrubland and is common and widespread between Cranbrook, Albany, the Stirling Range National Park and Esperance.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Foreman . David B. . Isopogon heterophyllus . Australian Biological Resources Study, Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment: Canberra . 17 November 2020.
  2. Web site: Isopogon heterophyllus. APNI. 17 November 2020.
  3. Book: Meissner . Carl . Lehmann . Johann G.C. . Plantae Preissianae . 1845 . Sumptibus Meissneri,1844-1847 [1848] . Hamburg . 504 . 17 November 2020.
  4. Web site: Isopogon heterophyllus. APNI. 17 November 2020.
  5. Rye . Barbara Lynette . Hislop . Michael C. . Two new synonyms in Western Australian Proteaceae: Isopogon heterophyllus and I. teretifolius subsp. petrophiloides . Nuytsia . 2017 . 28 . 169–172 . 17 November 2020.