Coleus argentatus
Silver Spurflower
Silver Spurflower
Wikipedia links: Angiosperms > Eudicots > Asterids > Lamiales > Lamiaceae
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Common name: Silver Spurflower
Conservation status: unknown
Etymology:
The specific epithet argentatus is Latin for "silver", referring to its foliage
Flowers:
The flowers are borne on terminal racemes up to 30 cm long, and are bluish white
Fruit:
Leaves:
The hairy leaves are ovate to broad-ovate, 5–11.5 cm long, 3–5.5 cm wide with crenate margins
The hairs give the plant an overall sage green to silvery colour
Stem & branches:
Roots:
Habit:
Growing to 1 m tall and broad, it is a spreading deciduous shrub
Habitat:
It is native to rock outcrops and rainforest in the border region of Queensland and NSW
Distribution:
Additional notes:
Originally described by Queensland botanist Stanley Thatcher Blake
Cultivation
It is cultivated in temperate regions as an ornamental bedding plant for its attractive silvery foliage
It strikes readily from cuttings, or can be grown from seed as a half-hardy annual
It has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit
Sources of information: