Acacia flexifolia
Acacia flexifolia, commonly known as bent-leaf wattle, bent-leaved wattle or small winter wattle, is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to the east coast of Australia. It is a low-lying or spreading shrub with ascending to erect, linear to narrowly linear or lance-shaped phyllodes with the narrower end towards the base, spherical heads of pale yellow or lemon yellow flowers and narrowly linear, thinly leathery, curved pods.
Description
Acacia flexifolia is a low-lying, spreading to bushy shrub that typically grows to a height of and has a branchlets angled at the ends with tiny hairs pressed against the surface between resinous ridges. Its phyllodes are ascending to erect, linear to narrowly linear or lance-shaped phyllodes with the narrower end towards the base, long, wide and glabrous. The midrib in markedly raised and very near the lower edge of the phyllodes. The flowers are usually borne in two spherical heads in axils, on a peduncles long, each head with three to ten pale yellow or lemon yellow flowers. Flowering usually occurs between June and September, and the pods are narrowly linear, thinly leather and curved, up to long and wide, brown and glabrous. The seeds are oblong, long and shiny brown with an aril on the end.
Taxonomy
Acacia flexifolia was first formally described in 1842 by the botanist George Bentham in Hooker's London Journal of Botany after an unpublished description by Allan Cunningham. The specific epithet means 'bent or curved leaves'.
Distribution and habitat
Bent-leaf wattle is scattered along the inland slopes of the Great Dividing Range and adjacent plains from near Miles in Queensland through central western New South Wales to Wedderburn in Victoria where it usually grows in open forest, woodland or mallee scrub in shallow soil.