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Tetratheca procumbens (spreading pinkbells) flowering along the Lyell Highway, Central Highlands, Tasmania.
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Mount Lindsay, Western Australia, Australia
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Maranoa Heights, Tasmania, Australia
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Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
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Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
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Nelson Bay, New South Wales, Australia
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It has interesting flat fruit.
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Tetratheca subaphylla, Mt Elizabeth, Vic.
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Tetratheca gunnii (Shy Pinkbells) flowering at the RTBG.Tetratheca gunnii (Shy Pinkbells) flowering at the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens.Tetratheca gunnii, is an endangered, endemic species to Tasmania with an extremely restricted distribution, growing solely on serpentine soils in the Dazzler Ranges near Beaconsfield. With the wild population estimated at less than 200 individuals, Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens staff have been working with the Threatened Species Section of the Tasmanian Government to establish a conservation collection at the Gardens. So far production from our nursery has replanted 100 of these plants back into the wild. Propagation work continues and the potted nursery collection will also be used to secure seed for long-term storage in the Tasmanian Seed Conservation Centre.
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Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia
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Mornington Peninsula, Victoria, near shore of Westernport Bay.
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Little Pine Lagoon, Tasmania, Australia
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Howden, Tasmania, Australia
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Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
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Nelson Bay, New South Wales, Australia
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It is always a delight to find these special plants with such a vivid colour. Photos: Fred
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Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
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Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia
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Victoria, Australia
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Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
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It is always a delight to find these special plants with such a vivid colour. Photos: Fred
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Tetratheca gunnii (Shy Pinkbells) flowering at the RTBG.Tetratheca gunnii (Shy Pinkbells) flowering at the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens.Tetratheca gunnii, is an endangered, endemic species to Tasmania with an extremely restricted distribution, growing solely on serpentine soils in the Dazzler Ranges near Beaconsfield. With the wild population estimated at less than 200 individuals, Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens staff have been working with the Threatened Species Section of the Tasmanian Government to establish a conservation collection at the Gardens. So far production from our nursery has replanted 100 of these plants back into the wild. Propagation work continues and the potted nursery collection will also be used to secure seed for long-term storage in the Tasmanian Seed Conservation Centre.
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Umina Beach, New South Wales, Australia