Acacia adoxa
Acacia adoxa, commonly known as the grey-whorled wattle, is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to north-western Australia. It is a dense, low-lying shrub with linear, more or less cylindrical phyllodes in whorls of 6 to 10, heads of golden-yellow flowers, and flat, sticky pods.
Description
Acacia adoxa is a dense, low-lying shrub that typically grows to a height of up to and about in diameter, sometimes to a height of and sometimes has hairy branchlets. Its phyllodes are arranged in whorls of 6 to 10, and are more or less cylindrical to flattened, mostly, sometimes with a small point on the end, and an impressed vein on the lower surface. There is a linear stipule long at the base of the phyllode.The flowers are golden-yellow, borne in heads of 25 to 35 on a peduncle mostly long. Flowering occurs from April to October, and the pods are flat, sessile long, wide, glabrous and sticky. The pods contain oblong seeds around long.
Taxonomy
Acacia adoxa was first formally described in 1972 by the botanist Leslie Pedley in Contributions from the Queensland Herbarium from specimens collected in the Northern Territory by George Chippendale. Pedley later reclassified the species in 2003 as Racosperma adoxum but the name was not accepted by the Australian Plant Census.Two varieties of A. adoxa are accepted by the Australian Plant Census:Acacia adoxa Pedley var. adoxa has densely woolly hairy branchlets and softly hairy phyllodes and flowers.Acacia adoxa var. subglabra Pedley has more or less glabrous branchlets, phyllodes and flowers.
The name of a hybrid between A. adoxa and Acacia spondylophylla is also accepted.