Conostylis laxiflora
Conostylis laxiflora is a rhizomatous, tufted perennial, grass-like plant or herb in the family Haemodoraceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It has flat, glabrous leaves, and yellow, tubular flowers.
Description
Conostylis laxiflora is a rhizomatous, tufted, perennial, grass-like plant or herb. It has flat leaves long, wide and glabrous, apart from bristles or hairs on the leaf margins. The flowers are borne in a loose cyme on a flowering stem long with a bract long subtending several flowers, each flower long on a pedicel long with floral bracts long at the base. The perianth is yellow, with six tepals long, the anthers long and the style long. Flowering occurs in October and November.
Taxonomy and naming
Conostylis laxiflora was first formally described in 1873 by George Bentham in his Flora Australiensis from specimens collected by Augustus Oldfield near the Vasse River. The specific epithet means "open-flowered".
This conostylis grows in sandy soils near swamps and creeks forest and heath in the Jarrah Forest, Swan Coastal Plain and Warren bioregions of south-western Western Australia.