Taxandria angustifolia



Angustifolia from the Latin angustus - narrow and folius - leaved. 

This species has a limited distribution. It can be found in restricted areas from Mount Hallowell near Denmark to Cheynes Beach, including the Porongurups. Occurs in heath, shrubland or woodland, on sandy or loamy soils often overlying granitic rocks, only occasionally in winter-wet swamps.

A fairly bushy, upright shrub up to 3.5 m tall, it is characterised by its long thin leaves. These are 10–23 mm long, up to 1.5 mm wide, thick, concave above and convex below.

The flowers are in clusters either axillary or on short shoots. Bracts and bracteoles largely hairless. The sepals are triangular and either hairless or with sparse hairs. Petals white. Stamens 10, one opposite each sepal and petal.

Fruits in roughly globular clusters, typically 6-10 mm across. Each capsule ovoid 2–3 mm across, hairless or slightly hairy.

Flowers January to July but the dried petals persist long after that. Fruits September to December the fruits remaining until the next season.









All photographs (c) Keith Morris, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC) unless otherwise indicated.

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