Verticordia eriocephala
Verticordia eriocephala, commonly known as lambswool, and common, native or wild cauliflower is a flowering plant in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is a shrub with one densely branching, spreading main stem, small leaves and dense heads of creamy-white flowers, giving rise to the common names "lambswool" and "cauliflower". It is widespread over its range but becoming less common because of land clearing and illegal collecting of the flowers.
Description
Verticordia eriocephala is a shrub which grows to a height of or more and a spread of and which has a single, highly branched stem at its base. Its leaves are elliptic in shape, dished and long, becoming shorter and broader near the flowering parts at the top.The flowers are scented and arranged in dense corymb-like groups, each flower on a stalk about long. The floral cup is hemispherical, long, constricted above the middle and hairy near its base. The sepals are creamy-white, long, with 5 hairy lobes and with one or two slender cilia extending out. The petals are white, broadly egg-shaped to almost round, about long, with a finely toothed edge. The style is straight, long and glabrous. Flowering time is from September to January and the plant may flower after attaining a height of only.
The leaves of this species are shorter and wider than those of Verticordia polytricha and is distinguished from that species and from Verticordia capillaris by the extent of hairiness in the flowering structures. It is also similar in appearance to Verticordia brownii.
Taxonomy and naming
Early collections of this verticordia were made in the 1890s by Richard Helms and more reliably, by William Vincent Fitzgerald in 1898 and for many years it was incorrectly described as Verticordia brownii. Verticordia eriocephala was first formally described by Alex George in 1991 and the description was published in Nuytsia from specimens collected near Mount Adams, north of Eneabba by Alex and Elizabeth George. According to Alex George, the specific epithet is derived from the Greek erion and cephala, in reference to the appearance of the flowering plants as large white heads. Elizabeth George mentioned cephale as Greek word for "head" instead. The ancient Greek word for "head" is kephalē.George placed this species in subgenus Verticordia, section Corymbiformis along with V. polytricha, V. densiflora, V. brownii, and V. capillaris.