Acacia gelasina
Acacia gelasina is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to the west of Western Australia. It is a dense, spreading, glabrous shrub with erect, lance-shaped phyllodes with the narrower end towards the base, spherical heads of pale yellow flowers and firmly papery to thinly leathery pods, rounded over the seeds.
Description
Acacia gelasina is a dense, spreading, glabrous shrub that typically grows to a height of. Its phyllodes are erect, lance-shaped with the narrower end towards the base, long, wide, thickly leathery and slightly rigid. The flowers are borne in up to six spherical heads in racemes long on peduncles long, each head with 35 to 50 pale yellow flowers. Flowering occurs from June to September, and the pods are narrowly oblong, up to long, wide, flat, firmly papery to thinly leathery, rounded over the seeds and slightly constricted between them. The seeds are round to broadly elliptic of broadly egg-shaped, somewhat flattened, dark brown to blackish and lack an aril.
Taxonomy
Acacia gelasina was first formally described in 1995 by Bruce Maslin from specimens collected by Alison Marjorie Ashby north of the Murchison River near the North West Coastal Highway in 1972. The specific epithet means 'a dimple', "referring to the shallow, circular depression on the lateral faces of the seeds".
Distribution and habitat
This species of wattle grows in yellow sand in closed scrub in the Coolgardie, Geraldton Sandplains and Yalgoo bioregions in the west of Western Australia.
Acacia gelasina is listed as "Priority Two" by the Western Australian Government Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions, meaning that it is poorly known and from only one or a few locations.