Calamus muelleri
Calamus muelleri, commonly known as southern lawyer cane or wait-a-while, is a climbing palm with a vine-like habit, endemic to the subtropical coastal rainforests of northern New South Wales and southern Queensland. Sharp hooks on the plant can snag the clothing of walkers in these forests, giving rise to the name "wait-a-while".
Description
C. muelleri is a clustering, climbing palm growing up to in length, with thin stems up to diameter. The pinnate fronds are alternate and more or less sessile. They are up to long with 7-13 leaflets on each side and have long recurved spines on the rachis. The leaflets have spines along the midrib on the upper surface and small sharp spurs on their margins. The leaf sheath is densely covered in spines.This species, like others in the genus, produces a modified sterile inflorescence up to long, which is armed with dozens of strong, recurved barbs that act like grappling hooks to latch on to nearby vegetation and provide support for the plant.
Fertile inflorescences are up to long and flowering occurs in all months of the year. The fruits are a globose drupe about in diameter, containing a single seed.