Skip to main content

Corchorus congener Halford

Reference
Austrobaileya 6:586-588, 628, Fig. 3 (2004)
Conservation Code
Priority Three
Naturalised Status
Native to Western Australia
Name Status
Current

Spreading shrub, to 0.6 m high. Fl. yellow, Apr to Jun or Aug to Nov. Sand, red sandy loam with limestone. Sand dunes, plains.

Amanda Spooner, Descriptive Catalogue, 10 February 2006
Image

Scientific Description

Shrub, with hairy stems. Leaves 15-60 mm long, 5-40 mm wide, not lobed; margins serrate; hairy, with stellate hairswith scales absent, Sessile glands absent; stipules present but early deciduous (only visible on youngest leaves), 15-19 mm long. Perianth clearly of two whorls (calyx and corolla), the corolla obvious and prominent. Pedicel present, 3.5-5 mm long; indumentum present, with stellate hairs present, with scales absent. Epicalyx (extra segments or 'bracteoles' immediately below the calyx) absent. Calyx cream or white, 7 mm long, the lobes fused less than half their length, Sessile glands absent, stellate hairs present, scales absent, Terminal appendages absent, number of ribs absent. Corolla yellow, 6 mm long, glabrous. Indumentum (outside) Sessile glands absent. Stamens five, free and inserted at the base of the ovary; filaments present, 3.8-4 mm long; anthers 0.3 mm long, indumentum absent (anthers glabrous). Staminodes absent, appendages absent. Ovary hairs or scales present, simple hairs absent, stellate hairs present, gland-tipped hairs absent; style 1, with a lobed or capitate stigma, 2.5-2.7 mm long, with one style branches or lobes, mostly glabrous, wing absent. Flowering time April, May, June, August, September, October or November. Distribution Botanical Province Eremaean, IBRA Bioregion Pilbara and Carnarvon. Conservation Code Priority Three (P3).

C. Hollister and K.R. Thiele, 11 August 2023

Distribution

IBRA Regions
Carnarvon, Pilbara.
IBRA Subregions
Cape Range, Hamersley, Roebourne.
IMCRA Regions
Ningaloo, Pilbara (nearshore).
Local Government Areas (LGAs)
Ashburton, Exmouth, Karratha.