Cyanothamnus nanus
Cyanothamnus nanus, commonly known as the dwarf boronia or small boronia is a plant in the citrus family Rutaceae and is endemic to eastern Australia. It is a prostrate or low spreading shrub with simple or three-part leaves and white or pale pink four-petalled flowers.
Description
Cyanothamnus nanus is a prostrate shrub or one that has weak, spreading branches and grows to about wide and high. Its youngest branches have a few soft hairs but become glabrous as they age. The leaves are simple or trifoliate on a petiole up to long. The leaves or leaflets are linear to elliptic or egg-shaped, long and wide. The flowers are white to pale pink and are arranged singly or in groups of up to three or more in leaf axils, the groups on a peduncle long, individual flowers on a pedicel. The four sepals are triangular to broadly egg-shaped, long and wide, overlapping at their bases. The four petals are long, wide and overlap at their bases. The stamens are covered with long, soft hairs. Flowering occurs from October to February.Taxonomy and naming
Dwarf boronia was first formally described in 1840 by William Jackson Hooker who gave it the name Boronia nana in Icones Plantarum from a specimen collected by Ronald Campbell Gunn on top of Rocky Cape. In a 2013 paper in the journal Taxon, Marco Duretto and others changed the name to Cyanothamnus nanus on the basis of cladistic analysis.The names of three varieties have been accepted by Plants of the World Online:Cyanothamnus nanus var. hyssopifolius has simple leaves;Cyanothamnus nanus var. nanus has mostly trifoliate leaves, mostly glabrous leaves, sepals and petals;Cyanothamnus nanus var. pubescens has mostly trifoliate leaves with short, soft hairs.