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D'Aguilar National ParkEven though I live in Brisbane, from my work on my website on Girraween National Park, I am more familiar with the Hibbertia species from the Granite Belt. This Brisbane species is supposed to flower December-February, not in May! You can get an idea of size from the tip of my index finger.
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An erect open multi-stemmed shrub with yellow fls. It often grows among other low shrubs for support, but can support itself. Identified by single flowers coming from stem and hooked hairs covering to the top of the sepals.
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A small shrub growing in low shrubs. "Diagnostic features. Hibbertia polyancistra may be uniquely diagnosed within the H. lineata species group by the combination of erect habit and large flowers (sepals (6)78(9) mm long) with the sepals thickly and evenly beset with hooked hairs." Nuytsia 28:186-188 Photos: Fred
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An erect open multi-stemmed shrub with yellow fls. It often grows among other low shrubs for support, but can support itself. Identified by single flowers coming from stem and hooked hairs covering to the top of the sepals.
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An erect open multi-stemmed shrub with yellow fls. It often grows among other low shrubs for support, but can support itself. Identified by single flowers coming from stem and hooked hairs covering to the top of the sepals.
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An erect open multi-stemmed shrub with yellow fls. It often grows among other low shrubs for support, but can support itself. Identified by single flowers coming from stem and hooked hairs covering to the top of the sepals.
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A small shrub growing in low shrubs. "Diagnostic features. Hibbertia polyancistra may be uniquely diagnosed within the H. lineata species group by the combination of erect habit and large flowers (sepals (6)78(9) mm long) with the sepals thickly and evenly beset with hooked hairs." Nuytsia 28:186-188
florabase.dpaw.wa.gov.au/browse/profile/48330Photos: Fred
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A small shrub growing in low shrubs. "Diagnostic features. Hibbertia polyancistra may be uniquely diagnosed within the H. lineata species group by the combination of erect habit and large flowers (sepals (6)78(9) mm long) with the sepals thickly and evenly beset with hooked hairs." Nuytsia 28:186-188 Photos: Fred
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Girraween, Queensland, Australia
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Tasmania, Australia
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Lake St Clair, Tasmania, Australia
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Hibbertia procumbens (spreading guineaflower) flowering in burnt heathland near the Tahune Airwalk, Tasmania.
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Lake St Clair, Tasmania, Australia
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Tasmania, Australia
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Lake St Clair, Tasmania, Australia
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Howden, Tasmania, Australia
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Howden, Tasmania, Australia
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Hibbertia procumbens (spreading guineaflower) flowering in burnt heathland near the Tahune Airwalk, Tasmania.
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Howden, Tasmania, Australia
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Stanthorpe, Queensland, Australia
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Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
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Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
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Howden, Tasmania, Australia
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Bukit Tagar, Hulu Selangor, Malaysia.
Tetracera scandens (Linn.) Merr. Dilleniaceae. CN: [Malay - Akar mempelas, Akar empelas], Stone leaf. Evergreen woody liana to 30 m liana, sometimes shrubby. Habitat - widespread in forest and forest margins to 1000 m. Young branchlets densely pubescent, glabrescent. Petiole 1-1.5 cm, pubescent; leaf blade ovate or obovate, 4-10 2.5-5 cm. Panicles terminal, 10-20 cm; Follicles ovate, ca. 1 cm, apex with persistent bent beaklike style. Dried leaves once used for sanding carved objects especially wood-based. Folk-medicine include for treatment of sore throat and hemoptysis. Synonym(s):
Tragia scandens L.
Delima sarmentosa L.Ref and suggested reading:FRIM Flora Database
www.theplantlist.org/tpl/record/tro-10900224www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=2&taxon_id=2...www.stuartxchange.org/Malakatmon.html