Verticordia blepharophylla
Verticordia blepharophylla is a flowering plant in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is an erect, open shrub with a single main stem, leaves with hairy margins and pale to deep mauve-pink flowers and which occurs in an area between Perth and Geraldton.
Description
Verticordia blepharophylla is an open branched shrub with a single stem at its base and which grows to a height of and a width of. The leaves are elliptic to almost circular in shape, long and are fringed with hairs up to about long.The flowers are scented and arranged in spikes near the ends of the branches, each flower on a stalk long. The floral cup is top-shaped, long, has 5 rounded ribs and a slightly warty surface. The sepals are pale to deep mauve-pink, long, with 6 or 7 lobes with thread-like fringes. The petals are the same colour as the sepals,, broadly egg-shaped with a fringe long. The style is S-shaped, about long, and has a dense beard of hairs long. Flowering time is from late November to February.
Taxonomy and naming
Verticordia blepharophylla was first formally described by Alex George in 1991 and the description was published in Nuytsia from specimens collected near Mount Adams by Margaret Pieroni. According to George, the specific epithet is derived from the ancient Greek words blepharis meaning "eyelash" and phyllon meaning "leaf", referring to the hairy leaf margins.George placed this species in subgenus Eperephes, section Verticordella along with V. pennigera, V. halophila, V. bifimbriata, V. lindleyi, V. carinata, V. drummondii, V. wonganensis,''V. paludosa, V. luteola, V. attenuata, V. tumida, V. mitodes, V. centipeda, V. auriculata, V. pholidophylla, V. spicata and V. hughanii''.