Polyosma rhytophloia, commonly known as wrinkled bark polyosma, is a plant in the family Escalloniaceae which is endemic to parts of eastern Queensland, Australia. It was first described in 1926.
Polyosma rhytophloia is a small evergreen tree growing up to high with a greenish/grey trunk measuring up to diameter. The glabrous, or hairless, leaves are elliptic to oblanceolate, with an cuneate base, an acuminate tip and a serrated margin. The lateral veins number from 6 to 12 either side of the midrib, and are conspicuous on both surfaces of the blade.
The inflorescence is a raceme (an unbranched spike) produced in the leaf axils or at the ends of branches. The cream/purple flowers are tubular, about long by wide. The fruit is a rounded or ovoid, dark purple or black berry containing a single seed. The fruit measures about and the seed about .
The wrinkled-bark polyosma was first described by the Australian botanists Cyril Tenison White and William Douglas Francis, based on specimens collected near Eungella and on the Atherton Tableland. Their paper, titled "Contributions to the Queensland Flora, No. 3", was read to the Royal Society of Queensland in 1925 and subsequently published in the Society's journal Proceedings of the Royal Society of Queensland in 1926.
In the Australian Plant Name Index, Plants of the World Online, and the IUCN Redlist, this species is treated as Polyosma rhytiphloia (note the alternate spelling in the epithet), despite it being originally published as rhytophloia. Bean & Forster argue that "The species epithet rhytophloia (meaning wrinkled bark) is derived from the Greek, and hence the correct connecting vowel is -o-".
The genus name Polyosma is compounded from the Ancient Greek word poly meaning "many", and the Latin word osma, meaning "odour" or "smell". The species epithet rhytophloia is created from the Ancient Greek words ῥυτίς (rhutís), "wrinkle", and φλόος (phlóos), "bark".
The native range of this species is coastal and sub-coastal ranges of eastern Queensland, from near Cooktown to the area around Eungella, west of Mackay. It grows as an understory tree in rainforest, at altitudes from about .
This species is listed by both the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and the Queensland Government Department of Environment and Science as least concern. In support of their assessment, IUCN states that the species has a wide distribution and there are no identified threats either current or foreseen.