Leucopogon rodwayi is a species of flowering plant in the heath family Ericaceae and is endemic to coastal New South Wales. It is an erect to spreading shrub with narrowly egg-shaped to elliptic leaves, and pendent, white, tube-shaped flowers arranged in groups of 6 to 15 in leaf axils, forming a spike up to long.
Leucopogon rodwayi is an erect to spreading shrub that typically grows to a height of, its young branchlets covered with a few soft hairs. The leaves are narrowly egg-shaped to elliptic, long and wide on a petiole up to long. Both sides of the leaves are glabrous, the edges are turned down, and there are a few small teeth on the edges. The flowers are borne in spikes of 6 to 15 up to long in leaf axils with bracteoles long at the base. The sepals are long, the petals white and joined at the base, forming a tube long, the lobes long. Flowering occurs from February to October, with a peak in August and September, and the fruit is about long and glabrous.[1] [2]
Leucopogon rodwayi was first formally described in 1926 by Victor Summerhayes in the Bulletin of Miscellaneous Information, Royal Gardens, Kew from specimens collected by Frederick Rodway near Jervis Bay in 1925.[3]
Leucopogon rodwayi grows in sand in coastal heath on ridges and rock platforms from Broadwater to Myall Lakes and at Jervis Bay in eastern New South Wales.