Veronica arenaria
Veronica arenaria is a flowering plant in the family Plantaginaceae. It is a small, clumping shrub with blue flowers. It grows in New South Wales and Queensland in Australia.
Descritpiton
Veronica arenaria is a small, softly woody herb with upright stems 3–100 cm high from the rootstock with short, stiff curved hairs. Leaves linear, sessile, margins entire or with occasional hairs or irregular lobes, pointed, 2–5.5 cm long, 1–3 mm wide, smooth and a few hairs on the margins. Violet blue flowers are borne in racemes long in clusters of 50-100, corolla long, calyx lobes long and wide. Flowering occurs from September to May and the fruit is a broad egg-shaped capsule, long, wide, notched, shiny and short hairs on upper margin.
Taxonomy and naming
Veronica arenaria was first formally described in 1846 by George Bentham in Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis from an unpublished description by Allan Cunningham. The specific epithet means "growing on sand".
Distribution and habitat
This species of Veronica grows in southern Queensland and New South Wales in sandy and rocky soils, river flats and sometimes in woodland.