Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Conospermum incurvum

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Family
  
Proteaceae

Scientific name
  
Conospermum incurvum

Order
  
Proteales

Genus
  
Conospermum

Rank
  
Species

Similar
  
Conospermum, Conospermum stoechadis, Conospermum caeruleum, Petrophile, Lechenaultia

Conospermum incurvum, commonly known as plume smokebush, is a shrub endemic to Western Australia.

Contents

Description

It grows as a prostrate little-branched shrub, the stems densely covered in slender, pointed leaves from seven to 30 millimetres long, and 0.5 to 0.8 millimetres wide. Although prostrate, it has erect flower stalks that give it a height of up to a metre. Flowers are white or grey, and occur in elongated panicles.

Taxonomy

It was first published in John Lindley's 1839 A Sketch of the Vegetation of the Swan River Colony, based on unspecified material. Its taxonomic history since that time has been entirely without incident, with neither synonyms nor infrageneric taxa being published. In 1995, Eleanor Bennett published a treatment of Conospermum for the Flora of Australia series of monographs, placing C. incurvum in Conospermum subg. Conospermum, sect. Eriostachya, subsect. Multibracteata. It is the type species of the subsection. Its closely relative is C. brachyphyllum, from which it may be distinguished by its more densely clustered leaves.

Distribution and habitat

It occurs in undulating sandplains of white, grey or yellow/brown sand over laterite, ranging from Eneabba south to Perth. Thus it primarily occurs in the Swan Coastal Plain and Geraldton Sandplains biogeographic regions. There are also some outlying populations in the Avon Wheatbelt and Jarrah Forest regions, and a single population in the Esperance Plains region north of Albany.

Ecology

It is not considered threatened.

References

Conospermum incurvum Wikipedia