Verticordia patens
Verticordia patens is a flowering plant in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is a shrub with linear, pointed leaves and faintly scented, pale yellow flowers in open heads on the ends of the branches. It is fairly common in a small area south of Badgingarra.
Description
Verticordia patens is a slender, woody shrub which grows to a height of between and up to wide. The leaves are linear in shape, semi-circular in cross-section and long with a pointed end.The flowers are faintly scented and arranged in fairly open, corymb-like groups on the ends of the branches on erect stalks long. The floral cup is about long, glabrous and slightly warty. The sepals are spreading, lemon-yellow, long, with between 5 and 7 feathery lobes and two hairy appendages. The petals are erect, pale yellow, about long and egg.shaped with a toothed margin. The style is long, straight and glabrous. Flowering time is from September to November.
Taxonomy and naming
This species was first formally described by Alex George in 1966 and the description was published in Western Australian Naturalist. He collected the type specimen at Moore River. The specific epithet is a Latin word meaning "open" referring to the open branching habit of this species.When he reviewed the genus in 1991, George placed this species in subgenus Chrysoma, section Chrysohoe along with V. nitens and V. nitens.