Hibbertia stellaris
Guinea flower
Guinea flower
Wikipedia links: Angiosperms > Eudicots > Rosids > Dilleniales > Dilleniaceae > Hibbertia stellaris
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Common name: Guinea flower
Also, star guinea flower or orange stars
Conservation status: Not threatened
Etymology:
The name Hibbertia honours George Hibbert, a patron of botany and slave trader
Flowers:
The orange flowers appear from August to February
Populations from the more northern parts of its range having more yellowish flowers
Fruit:
Leaves:
Linear to narrow-spathulate (spoonshaped) leaves
Measure 1.5-2.5 cm long and 0.5-2.5 mm across
Stem & branches:
The stems are often red-tinged
Roots:
Habit:
Hibbertia stellaris grows as a small shrub 30–70 cm high and 30–60 cm across
Habitat:
It naturally grows in swamps
Despite this, it is extremely sensitive to phytophthora and needs to be grown in well-drained soil in cultivation
Distribution:
Found across a wide area of Western Australia
Additional notes:
Taxonomy
Austrian botanist Stephan Endlicher described Hibbertia stellaris in his 1837 work Enumeratio plantarum quas in Novae Hollandiae ora austro-occidentali ad fluvium Cygnorum et in sinu Regis Georgii collegit Carolus Liber Baro de Hügel, from a specimen collected near the Swan River.
The specific epithet is from the Latin stella "star", and refers to the starry flowers
Meanwhile, German botanist Ernst Gottlieb von Steudel described Hibbertia tenuiramea in the 1845 work Plantae Preissianae, from a specimen collected near Perth
George Bentham classified it in the series Brachyantherae based on flower anatomy, defining members of the group having glabrous carpels, 15 stamens without staminodia, pedunculate flowers and linear leaves. He also synonymised H. tenuiramea with H. stellaris
Cultivation
A brilliantly orange flowering ground cove
A highly regarded horticultural plant on account of its brilliant orange flowers and has been in cultivation for decades; however, it is generally short-lived in cultivation (to the point where it is most convenient to treat it as an annual)
It generally succumbs within 18 months of planting in the ground, although it lives longer in containers such as pots or hanging baskets
It is hardy to moderate frosts
Plants in full sun (as opposed to in part-shade) flower more profusely but tend to be shorter-lived
It is easily propagated by cuttings taken in spring after flowering. It is best grown in an open, acid sandy soil with underlying water (such as in a saucer of water, or better, on a capillary mat)
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