Zieria prostrata
Zieria prostrata commonly known as headland zieria, is a plant in the citrus family Rutaceae. It is endemic to the Coffs Harbour district in New South Wales. It is a prostrate shrub with leaves composed of three leaflets, and flowers with four pink to white petals. It is only known from four headlands and is classified as an endangered species.
Description
Zieria prostrata is a prostrate or low, scrambling shrub with glabrous, ridged branches and which grows to a height of. Its leaves are composed of three narrow oval leaflets with the middle leaflet long and wide and the others smaller. Both surfaces of the leaf are the same colour, dotted with oil glands and glabrous, with a stalk long.The flowers are pink in the bud stage but turn white as they open. They are arranged in groups of mostly 3 to 7 in leaf axils and the groups are usually much shorter than the leaves. The four sepal lobes are about long, the four petals are long and in common with other zierias, there are only four stamens. Flowering mainly occurs from late August to late September or October and is followed by fruit which is a follicle composed of up to four sections joined at the base and which burst open to release their seeds when ripe.