Philotheca fitzgeraldii is a species of flowering plant in the family Rutaceae and is endemic to the south of Western Australia. It is an erect, compact or spreading shrub with cylindrical, glandular-warty leaves and white flowers arranged singly in leaf axils and on the ends of branchlets.
Philotheca fitzgeraldii is an erect, compact or spreading shrub that grows to a height of with minutely hairy branchlets. The leaves are more or less cylindrical, glandular-warty, long and about wide and channelled on the upper surface. The flowers are borne singly in leaf axils and on the ends of branchlets, each flower on a pedicel long. There are five leathery, semi-circular sepals about long and five egg-shaped white petals about long. The ten stamens are glabrous. Flowering occurs from June to October and the fruit is about long and beaked.[1]
This philotheca was first formally described in 1904 by Cecil Andrews who gave it the name Eriostemon fitzgeraldii and published the description in Journal of the West Australian Natural History Society from specimens he collected "on sand plains north of Esperance" in 1903.[2] [3] In 1998, Paul Wilson changed the name to Philotheca fitzgeraldii in the journal Nuytsia.[4] [5]
Philotheca fitzgeraldii grows in heath and woodland between Norseman and Caiguna in the Coolgardie, Esperance Plains and Mallee biogeographic regions.
This species is classified as "not threatened" by the Western Australian Government Department of Parks and Wildlife,