Melaleuca calothamnoides
Melaleuca calothamnoides is a plant in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae and is endemic to a relatively small area on the west coast of Western Australia. It has attractive red and green flowering spikes and soft foliage but has proven to be difficult to grow in gardens.
Description
Melaleuca calothamnoides is a shrub growing to a height of and about wide with rough bark. The leaves are arranged alternately and long and wide. They are glabrous, fleshy, linear and almost circular in cross section with a blunt, curved tip.The flowers are arranged in cylindrical spikes that are long and wide. The spikes occur on old wood and there are 40 to 60 flowers on each spike. The stamens are arranged in five bundles around the flowers with 4 to 5 stamens per bundle, and are usually green in the centre grading to red at the tips. Flowering occurs over an extended period from July to October. The fruit are woody capsules in dense spikes along the stem long and each capsule is long and wide.