Bauera rubioides
. . .
. . .
Wikipedia links: Angiosperms > Eudicots > Rosids > Oxalidales > Cunoniaceae > Bauera rubioides
Other links:
Common name: unknown
commonly known as river rose, dog rose or wiry bauera
Conservation status: unknown
Etymology:
x
Flowers:
The flowers are borne on pedicels more than 5 mm long and have six to eight toothed sepals 3–4 mm long, six to eight usually pink sometimes white, petals 6–8 mm long, and usually fifty to sixty cream-coloured stamens
Flowering mostly occurs in spring and summer
Fruit:
x
Leaves:
The leaves are trifoliate, the leaflets narrowly elliptic, mostly 3–15 mm long, 1.5–5.0 mm wide
Usually have four to ten teeth on each edge
Stem & branches:
Wiry branches
Roots:
x
Habit:
A scrambling, tangled shrub that typically grows to a height of up to 2 m and has wiry, extensively-branched stems
Habitat:
Grows in wet, often shaded areas
Distribution:
Endemic to south-eastern Australia
In south-eastern Queensland, the coast and ranges of NSW, in southern Victoria, south-eastern South Australia and it is common in Tasmania
Additional notes:
Taxonomy
Bauera rubioides was first formally described in 1801 by Henry Cranke Andrews in The Botanist's Repository for New, and Rare Plants
Andrews noted "...the whole plant has, at first sight, much the appearance of a Rubus."
John Sims recorded in Curtis's Botanical Magazine that "...the trivial name is derived from the resemblance which it bears, especially in its young state, to a Rubia, not a Rubus, as Mr. Andrews, with his usual accuracy, would have it."
Use in horticulture
Bauera rubioides is readily grown from cuttings
Is hardy in moist, well-drained soil in full sun or light shade