Verticordia capillaris
Verticordia capillaris is a species of flowering plant in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is a shrub with a single stem at the base, small leaves and creamy white or occasionally pink flowers in dense corymb-like groups. It is common in small areas near Geraldton.
Description
Verticordia capillaris is a shrub which grows to a height of and a spread of and which has a single, highly branched stem at its base. Its leaves are linear to club-shaped, roughly circular in cross-section, long, with the leaves near the flowers more club-shaped than those further down the stems.The flowers are lightly scented and arranged in corymb-like groups, each flower on an erect stalk long. The floral cup is shaped like half a sphere, constricted above the middle, about long and hairy. The sepals are creamy-white, occasionally pink, long, with 2 or 5 main lobes but the entire border of the sepals is feather-like. The petals are the same colour as the sepals, long, egg-shaped and covered with short hairs. The style is purple coloured, straight and long. Flowering time is from September to November.
Taxonomy and naming
Verticordia capillaris was first formally described by Alex George in 1991 and the description was published in Nuytsia from specimens collected in Kalbarri National Park by Alex George and Bob Wemm. The specific epithet is "named from the Latin capillaris, in reference to the very slender style".George placed this species in subgenus Verticordia, section Corymbiformis along with V. polytricha, V. densiflora, V. eriocephala and V. brownii.