Cyanothamnus anemonifolius


Cyanothamnus anemonifolius, commonly known as narrow-leaved boronia or sticky boronia, is a flowering plant that is endemic to south-eastern Australia. It is a shrub with mostly pinnate leaves, with white to pale pink four-petalled flowers in leaf axils.

Description

Cyanothamnus anemonifolius is an erect shrub that grows to a height of with pimply glands on its branches. The leaves are usually pinnate, sometimes simple or bipinnate, mostly long and wide in outline on a petiole usually long. The leaflets or simple leaves are wedge-shaped to elliptic or egg-shaped, mostly long, wide, the same colour on both sides and often with the tip divided into three lobes. The flowers are white to pale pink and are arranged singly or in groups of up to nine in leaf axils, the individual flowers on a pedicel long. The four sepals are broadly egg-shaped, long and wide. The four petals are long and with their bases overlapping. There are eight stamens with those near the sepals slightly longer than those nearer to the petals. Flowering occurs from August to April and the fruit is a glabrous capsule, long and about wide.

Taxonomy and naming

This species was first formally described in 1825 by Allan Cunningham and given the name Boronia anemonifolia in the book Geographical Memoirs on New South Wales. In a 2013 paper in the journal Taxon, Marco Duretto and others changed the name to Cyanothamnus anemonifolus on the basis of cladistic analysis. The specific epithet is a reference to the similarity of the leaves of this species to those in the genus Anemone.
In 2000, Peter Neish and Marco Duretto described four subspecies of B. anemonifolia, that were accepted by the Australian Plant Census: The names have subsequently been changed to reflect the change in the genus name:Cyanothamnus anemonifolius Duretto & Heslewood subsp. anemonifolius, has leaves that are simple, pinnate or bipinnate, less than wide and with three teeth on the end, the petiole about the same length as the leaflets, the leaflets hairy when young and the petals not remaining on the fruit.Cyanothamnus anemonifolius subsp. aurifodinus Duretto & Heslewood has simple leaves, or if trifoliate, the petiole is much longer than the leaflets, and petals long.Cyanothamnus anemonifolius subsp. variabilis Duretto & Heslewood has leaves that are simple, pinnate or bipinnate, the petiole about the same length as the leaflets, the leaflets glabrous and the petals not remaining on the fruit.Cyanothamnus anemonifolius subsp. wadbilligensis Duretto & Heslewood has leaves that are simple, pinnate or bipinnate, the leaflets without teeth on the end and wide, the petiole about the same length as the leaflets, the leaflets hairy when young and the petals not remaining on the fruit.

Distribution and habitat