Eremophila polyclada
Twiggy Emu-bush
Twiggy Emu-bush
Wikipedia links: AAngiosperms > Eudicots > Asterids > Lamiales > Scrophulariaceae > Eremophila polyclada
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Common name: Twiggy Emu-bush
flowering lignum, lignum fuchsia and desert lignum
Conservation status: ...
Etymology:
Eremophila is derived from the Ancient Greek ἐρῆμος (erêmos) meaning "lonely" or "desert" and φίλος (phílos) meaning “dear" or "beloved” alluding to the species' adaptation to arid environments
The specific epithet (polyclada) is derived from the ancient Greek words polys (πολύς), meaning "many" and klados (κλάδος) meaning "twig"
Flowers:
The flowers are borne singly or in pairs in leaf axils on a stalk 1–2.5 mm long
There are 5 green, overlapping sepals which are egg-shaped, have a prominent keel, thin, wing-like edges and are mostly 4.5–7 mm long
The petals are 20–35 mm long, joined at their bases to form a tube
The petal tube is white to very pale whitish-lilac and has faint blackish to green purple spots on the inside of the lobes and purple spots inside the tube
The tube and petal lobes are glabrous except that the middle part of the lowest lobe and the inside of the tube are hairy
The 4 stamens are fully enclosed in the tube
Flowers appear between October and May
Fruit:
Oval-shaped, cone-shaped or elliptical with a pointed and are 8.5–13 mm long
Leaves:
The leaves are arranged alternately along the branches and are linear in shape, mostly 20–40 mm long, 1–3 mm wide and are often sticky when young due to the presence of resin
Stem & branches:
Its branches diverge at about 90° to each other and are stiff, often with a spine at the end
Roots:
Habit:
Eremophila polyclada is a dense, spreading shrub which grows to a height of 1–3 m and a width of 1–5 m
Habitat:
It grows in sandy to clay loam soils often on floodplains and other low-lying areas
Distribution:
Endemic to Australia
It occurs in all mainland states except Western Australia
Eremophila polyclada is widespread in NSW to the west of Lightning Ridge and in southern Queensland
It is also found in a few places along the Murray River in Victoria and South Australia
There is one record from Tarlton Downs in the Northern Territory
Additional notes:
Taxonomy and naming
Eremophila polyclada is a plant in the figwort family Scrophulariaceae
The species was first formally described by Ferdinand von Mueller in 1855 as Pholidia polyclada
The description was published in Journal of an Expedition into the Interior of Tropical Australia.[7] In 1860 Mueller changed the name to Eremophila polyclada
Use in horticulture
Twiggy emu-bush is an ornamental shrub which is well known in horticulture, and some specimens have been grown for more than 35 years
It flowers profusely in summer, bearing masses of white flowers when most other shrubs are dormant and is a useful screening plant, with its dense, tangled branches
Propagation is easiest from cuttings which strike within a few weeks in warm weather and its arching branches sometimes develop roots when they touch the ground
A very drought tolerant shrub, it only requires watering once or twice during a long drought and a deep watering early in summer will sometimes stimulate a mass flowering
It is also tolerant of frost and can be pruned, preferably in early autumn
A hybrid with E. divaricata called Eremophila 'summertime blue'[13] is popular in American gardens
Sources of information: