Dodonaea serratifolia


Dodonaea serratifolia is a species of flowering plant in the family Sapindaceae and is endemic to the Great Dividing Range in New South Wales, Australia. It is a polygamodioecious, erect shrub with simple, narrowly ellipic leaves with irregular serrations on the edges, flowers in cymes with four sepals, six to eight stamens, and capsules with four or five membranous wings.

Description

Dodonaea serratifolia is an erect, polygamodioecious shrub that typically grows to a height of up to. Its leaves are simple, glabrous, long and wide on a petiole long. The flowers are arranged in cymes of three to six on pedicels long. The flowers have four egg-shaped sepals long that fall off as the flowers open. There are six to eight stamens and the ovary is glabrous. The fruit is a glabrous, three- or four-winged, broadly elliptic capsule, long and wide, the wings wide and membranous.

Taxonomy

Dodonaea serratifolia was first formally described in 1975 by Donald MacGillivray in the journal Telopea from specimens near Grassy Creek in the Gibraltar Range National Park in 1966. The specific epithet means 'serrate-leaved'.

Distribution and habitat

This species of Dodonaea grows in forest on granitic soils in a few populations along the Great Dividing Range from west of Grafton, [New South Wales|Grafton] to west of Port Macquarie in New South Wales.