Kennedia coccinea
Kennedia coccinea, commonly known as coral vine, is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is a twining, climbing or prostrate shrub with trifoliate leaves and orange-pink, red and pink, pea-like flowers.
Description
Kennedia coccinea is a twining, climbing or prostrate shrub, with stems up to in diameter covered with white to ginger-coloured hairs. The leaves are trifoliate, the end leaflet long and wide, the lateral leaflets smaller. The leaves are a darker green on the upper surface than the lower and are on a petiole long, each leaflet on a petiolule long. The stipules at the base of the petiole are triangular, long. The flowers are long and arranged in groups of between three and thirty on a peduncle long, each flower on a pedicel long. The five sepals are hairy, long with lobes long. The standard petal is orange-red to pink with a greenish-yellow centre, long, the wings pink and long and the keel red and long. Flowering occurs from July to December and the fruit is a flattened, narrow oblong pod long.Image:Elegant Scarlet Kennedia from [Magazine of Botany by Paxton..jpg|thumb| Kennedia coccinea var. elegans illustrated in Paxton's Magazine of Botany in 1835]
Taxonomy
This species was first formally described in 1794 by William Curtis who gave it the name Glycine coccinea in his Botanical Magazine from plants raised "in the neighbourhood of London from Botany-Bay seeds". In 1805, Étienne Pierre Ventenat changed the name to Kennedia coccinea in his book Jardin de la Malmaison. The specific epithet means "scarlet".Two varieties, elegans and coccinea were described in Paxton's Magazine of Botany in 1835, and a further three varieties molly, sericea and villosawere transferred from the genus Zichya in 1923 by Czech botanist Karel Domin. All five of these varieties are now regarded as synonyms of K. coccinea by the Australian Plant Census.
In 2010, Terena R. Lally described three subspecies of K. coccinea and the names are accepted by the Australian Plant Census:
- Kennedia coccinea subsp. calcaria Lally is a prostrate or scrambling shrub with flowers in groups of thirteen to thirty or more, growing on sand in coastal heath;
- Kennedia coccinea Vent. subsp. coccinea is a twining or scrambling shrub with flowers in groups of thirteen to thirty or more, growing in forest;
- Kennedia coccinea subsp. esotera Lally is a prostrate shrub with flowers in groups of three to twelve.
Distribution and habitat