Eremophila glabra
Eremophila glabra, commonly known as tar bush, is a plant in the figwort family, Scrophulariaceae and is endemic to Australia. It is sometimes a low, ground-hugging and sometimes an erect shrub. The leaves are variable in size and shape and there is a range of flower colours. In spite of its scientific name, not all forms of the plant are glabrous but most have many small, raised glands on the stems, flowers and leaves.
Description
Eremophila glabra grows to in height, sometimes a prostrate shrub and sometimes erect. The leaves are arranged alternately, sometimes crowded, other times sparse, usually lance-shaped but they may also be linear to egg-shaped. They are long and wide, the end pointed and the base tapering gradually towards the stem. The leaves and stems are covered with small, raised glands.The flowers are red, orange, yellow or yellowish green, lack spots and are arranged singly or in pairs in the leaf axils on a stalk which is long. There are 5 sepals which are narrow egg-shaped to triangular and of slightly differing lengths. The petals, which give the flowers their colour are long and joined in a tube with 5 lobes at the end. The upper lobes are pointed and usually close together while the lower lip is blunt and bends backwards. There are four stamens which extend beyond the end of the petals. Flowering occurs between early autumn and summer and is followed by fruit which are oval to almost spherical, about in diameter, glabrous, dry or fleshy and dark brown.
Taxonomy
The species was first formally described in 1810 by Robert Brown who gave it the name Stenochilus glaber. The description was published in Prodromus Florae Novae Hollandiae et Insulae Van Diemen. In 1921, Carl Hansen Ostenfeld changed the name to Eremophila glabra, publishing the change in the journal Biologiske meddelelser, Kongelige Danske Videnskabernes Selskab.Subspecies
The following names have been accepted by the Australian Plant Census as at April 2020:- Eremophila glabra subsp. albicans (Gand.) Chinnock;
- Eremophila glabra subsp. carnosa Chinnock;
- E. glabra subsp. chlorella Chinnock;
- E. glabra subsp. elegans Chinnock;
- Eremophila glabra (R.Br.) Ostenf. subsp. glabra;
- E. glabra subsp. murrayana Chinnock;
- E. glabra subsp. psammophora Chinnock;
- E. glabra subsp. tomentosa Chinnock;
- E. glabra subsp. verrucosa Chinnock.
The specific epithet glabra is a Latin word meaning "smooth" or "hairless" possibly referring to the hairless ovary of this species.