Stirlingia simplex
Stirlingia simplex is a species of flowering plant in the family Proteaceae. It is endemic to Western Australia.
Description
A woody perennial, S. simplex can grow as a shrub or as suckering herb with short-lived stems arising from a perennial rootstock. Stems may be up to long, and the plant as a whole grows to a height of, rarely to. It has soft leaves that bifurcate repeatedly into lobes, with the final lobes measuring from long. Flowers are cream or yellow, and occur in dense heads from in diameter, atop scapes up to tall.Taxonomy
The species was first published by John Lindley in his 1839 A Sketch of the [Vegetation of the Swan River Colony], based on unspecified material. Lindley commented that it "resembles a Sanicula".Since that time, it has had a fairly straightforward taxonomic history. It has only two synonyms:
- Carl Meissner published S. capillifolia in 1855, but this was declared a taxonomic synonym of S. simplex by Alex George in 1995.
- In 1884 Ferdinand [von Mueller] proposed to transfer Stirlingia to Simsia, the original, albeit illegal, name for the genus. His transfer was not accepted, and Simsia simplex is now a nomenclatural synonym of Stirlingia simplex.