Melaleuca paludicola
Melaleuca paludicola, commonly known as river bottlebrush, is a plant in the myrtle family Myrtaceae, and is endemic to eastern Australia. It is a shrub or small tree with flexible, often drooping branches, pinkish new growth and spikes of cream, pale yellow, or sometimes pink flowers in summer.
Description
Melaleuca paludicola is a shrub or tree growing to tall, with fibrous bark, or hard, fissured bark on older plants. Its leaves are arranged alternately and are long, wide, flat, linear to narrow lance-shaped and have a small point at the end. There is a distinct mid-vein and 11–18 indistinct side veins.The flowers are a shade of cream to yellow, occasionally pink and are arranged in spikes on the ends of branches which continue to grow after flowering and also on the sides of the branches. The spikes are in diameter with 10 to 40 individual flowers. The petals are long and fall off as the flower ages and there are 48–67 stamens in each flower. Flowering occurs mainly from October to January and is followed by fruit which are woody, cup-shaped capsules, long.
Taxonomy and naming
Melaleuca paludicola was named in 2006 by Lyndley Craven in Novon when he transferred Callistemon sieberi to the present genus. Callistemon sieberi was first formally described by botanist Augustin Pyramus de Candolle in 1828 in Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis.The specific epithet is from the Latin word palus meaning “swamp”, "marsh", "bog" or "fen" and the suffix -cola meaning “inhabitant”. An earlier, alternative name for the species was Callistemon paludosus and the present name was chosen to link with the earlier one.
Callistemon paludosus is regarded as a synonym of Melaleuca paludicola by the Royal [Botanic Gardens, Kew].