Verticordia lindleyi
Verticordia lindleyi is a flowering plant in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is sometimes an openly branched shrub, other times more or less dense, with small leaves and spreading, spike-like groups of pink or purple flowers along the stems in summer, sometimes also in autumn.
Description
Verticordia lindleyi is a shrub which grows to a height of usually with one main stem, either openly or densely branched. Its leaves are egg-shaped to elliptic, slightly dished, long and covered with short hairs.The flowers are lightly scented and are arranged along the stems in spike-like groups, each flower on a spreading stalk long. The floral cup is a top-shaped, about long, 5-ribbed and glabrous with rounded green appendages about long. The sepals are pink or purple, occasionally white, long, with 5 to 7 hairy lobes. The petals are a similar colour to the sepals, egg-shaped, long and sometimes have a few small teeth on the end. The style is long, S-shaped and hairy. Flowering time is from November to February, or sometimes as late as May.
Taxonomy and naming
Verticordia lindleyi was first formally described by Johannes Schauer in 1841 from a specimen collected by James Drummond near the Swan River, and the description was published in Monographia Myrtacearum Xerocarpicarum. The specific epithet honours the botanist John Lindley.Alex George undertook a review of the genus Verticordia in 1991 and described two subspecies:Verticordia lindleyi F.Muell. subsp. lindleyi which has petals which narrow towards their tip and lack teeth on their tip or have short teeth;Verticordia lindleyi subsp purpurea A.S.George which has petals that are broad near their tip and have relatively large teeth;
George placed this species in subgenus Integripetala, section Verticordella along with V. pennigera, V. halophila, V. blepharophylla, V. carinata, V. attenuata, V. drummondii, V. wonganensis, V. paludosa, V. luteola, V. bifimbriata, V. tumida, V. mitodes, V. centipeda, V. auriculata, V. pholidophylla, V. spicata and V. hughanii.