Epacris rhombifolia
Epacris rhombifolia commonly known as mountain coral heath, is a plant in the heath family Ericaceae and is endemic to eastern Australia. It is an erect, multi-stemmed shrub with broad, rhombic leaves and white flowers with four petals, the flowers spreading down the branches. It only grows in wet, subalpine heath and is sometimes regarded as a variety of Epacris microphylla.
Description
Epacris rhombifolia is an erect shrub with several main stems and that typically grows to a height of up to 2. Its young stems are reddish-brown and covered with short, soft, downy hairs when young. The leaves are rhombic, long and wide, more or less flat and overlapping each other when young. They are glabrous, have indistinct veins and a petiole long. The flowers are white, wide and arranged in leaf axils, spreading down the branches and have white petals forming a bell-shaped tube. The buds are surrounded by 16 to 20 white, egg-shaped bracts and white, egg-shaped sepals long and longer than the petal tube. The petal tube is about long, wide and the lobes are about long and do not overlap. Flowering occurs from December to March and the fruit that follows are capsules about long and wide.Taxonomy and naming
Mountain coral heath was first formally described in 1810 by Lilian Fraser and Joyce Vickery, who gave it the name Epacris microphylla var. rhombifolia. The description was published in Journal and Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales. The variety was raised to species level in 2015 by Yvonne Menadue and Ron Crowden. The specific epithet is derived from the Latin words rhombus meaning "an equilateral parallelogram with unequal pairs ofangles" and folium meaning "leaf".