Aggreflorum longifolium
Aggreflorum longifolium is a species of shrub or small tree that is endemic to north-western Australia. It has weeping branches, smooth bark, pale green linear leaves, small white flowers and thin-walled fruit.
Description
Aggreflorum longifolium is a shrub or tree that typically grows to a height of and has weeping branches and smooth white, cream-coloured or pink bark. The leaves are arranged alternately, sessile, linear, the same shade of pale green on both sides, long and long. The flower buds are arranged singly in leaf axils surrounded by bracts that are shed before the flower opens. The flowers are wide on a pedicel about long. The floral cup is long, and the sepals have hairy margins. Flowering occurs from July to October and the fruit is a glabrous capsule long and wide.Taxonomy and naming
This species was first formally described in 1920 by Cyril Tenison White and William Douglas Francis who gave it the name Agonis longifolia and published the description in the Botany Bulletin, Department of Agriculture, Queensland. In 2023, Peter Gordon Wilson changed the name to Aggreflorum ellipticum.In the same journal, Wilson changed the names of 2 subspecies of Leptospermum madidum to Aggreflorum longifolium and the names are accepted by Plants of the World Online:Aggreflorum longifolium subsp. longifolium has leaves wide and fruits wide.Aggreflorum longifolium subsp. sativum A.R.Bean has leaves wide and fruits wide.