Correa lawrenceana
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Wikipedia links: Angiosperm > Eudicots > Rosids > Sapindales > Rutaceae > Correa lawrenceana
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Common name: Mountain Correa
Conservation status: unknown
Etymology:
x
Flowers:
The flowers are arranged singly or in groups of up to seven in leaf axils, rarely on the ends of branchlets, each flower on a pedicel 5–50 mm long
The calyx is hemispherical to cup-shaped, 3–10 mm long and 4–6 mm wide
The corolla is cylindrical, greenish yellow to red with a scaly to velvety surface, 12–50 mm long with four short lobes on the end
The stamens project well beyond the end of the corolla
Flowering occurs in spring and sporadically at other times
Fruit:
x
Leaves:
The leaves are arranged in opposite pairs, elliptical to egg-shaped, 13–120 mm long and 7–70 mm wide on a petiole up to 16 mm long
Stem & branches:
A shrub that typically grows to a height of 0.6–9 m, sometimes a tree to 16 m, and has branchlets covered with rusty hairs
Roots:
x
Habit:
A shrub or small tree
It has elliptical to egg-shaped leaves arranged in opposite pairs and cylindrical, greenish yellow to red flowers usually arranged singly or in groups of up to seven in leaf axils with the stamens protruding beyond the end of the corolla
Habitat:
The species is found in rainforest and sclerophyll forest in Tasmania, Victoria, NSW the ACT and Queensland
Var. rosea is only found in the Snowy Mountains of NSW
Distribution:
Endemic to Australia
Variety cordifolia grows in forest on the coast and tablelands of southern NSW, the Australian Capital Territory and far north-eastern Victoria
Variety genoensis is only known from the banks of the Genoa River near the NSW - Victoria border
Variety glandulifera is found in the mountains from the Gibraltar Range in NSW to the McPherson Range in south-eastern Queensland
Variety grampiana grows among rocks in mountain areas, mainly in the Grampians
Variety latrobeana is found in south-eastern NSW and eastern Victoria
Variety lawrenceana occurs in mountainous areas in Tasmania and the Australian Capital Territory, var. macrocalyx is found in mountainous areas between the Taree and the Illawarra regions in NSW
Additional notes:
Taxonomy
This species was first described in 1834 by English botanist William Jackson Hooker who gave it the name Correa lawrenciana and published the description in his journal The Journal of Botany
The specific epithet honours Tasmanian botanist Robert William Lawrence (1807-1833) who, together with Ronald Gunn, collected the plant material sent to Hooker
In 1998, Paul Wilson corrected the name to Correa lawrenceana to conform to the Tokyo Code
A subgenus of Correa (Correa subgenus Persistens Othman, Duretto and G.J. Jord.) was formally described in 2011 comprising two species, C. lawrenceana and C. baeuerlenii
Unlike other Correa species, C. lawrenceana does not readily form hybrids with other species
The names of eight varieties are accepted at the Australian Plant Census:
Correa lawrenceana var. cordifolia commonly known as pink mountain-correa, is distinguished by its broadly elliptic to broadly heart-shaped leaves and hairy calyx 4–5 mm (0.16–0.20 in) long.
Correa lawrenceana var. genoensis commonly known as Genoa River correa, is distinguished by its broadly elliptic to broadly heart-shaped leaves and glabrous green calyx 9–12 mm long
Correa lawrenceana var. glandulifera has elliptic or egg-shaped leaves, a shallow hemispherical calyx about 2 mm long covered with star-shaped hairs and a yellowish green corolla
Correa lawrenceana var. grampiana commonly known as Grampians mountain-correa, has leathery, broadly elliptical leaves, a calyx covered with woolly rust-coloured hairs and a cylindrical corolla covered with velvety hairs
Correa lawrenceana. var. latrobeana is distinguished by its broadly elliptic to broadly heart-shaped leaves and hairy calyx 4–7 mm long
Correa lawrenceana Hook. var. lawrenceana has narrow elliptical leaves 20–40 mm long and a green corolla
Correa lawrenceana var. macrocalyx is similar to var. cordifolia but has a calyx 5–10 mm long
Correa lawrenceana var. rosea has narrow elliptical leaves 40–60 mm long, a calyx 3–5 mm long and a narrow cylindrical corolla that is pink to dull red with green lobes
Some varieties grade into each other, and the delineation between them is imprecise
Ecology
The flowers are presumed to be pollinated by either birds or bees
Use in horticulture
Correa lawrenceana is suited to a cool, moist, partly shaded position and is known to tolerate frost and snow
It can be used as a screening plant and will attract honeyeaters to the garden
Plants are easily propagated from cuttings, whereas seed can be difficult