Melaleuca pomphostoma
Melaleuca pomphostoma is a plant in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae, and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is a small, dense shrub with fleshy, narrow leaves, greenish-yellow flowers. It is similar and closely related to Melaleuca bracteosa but differs in the colour and number of stamens in each flower.
Description
Melaleuca pomphostoma is a shrub which grows to about tall with thick, rough, slightly spongy grey bark. Its leaves are arranged alternately, glabrous, fleshy, long and wide and very narrow egg-shaped with a rounded end.The flowers are arranged in heads or short spikes containing 3 to 12 individual flowers, the spike about wide. They are greenish-yellow with the stamens arranged in five bundles around each flower, the bundles containing 11 to 18 stamens. The flowering season is in autumn and winter and is followed by fruit which are woody capsules long.
Melaleuca pomphostoma is similar to Melaleuca bracteosa but differs from it in having fewer stamens, a different leaf shape and distinctive, numerous, white raised stomata, which are barely visible with a hand lens, on the leaf blades.