Correa pulchella
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Wikipedia links: Angiosperms > Eudicots > Rosids > Sapindales > Rutaceae > Correa pulchella
Other links:
Common name: Salmon Correa
Conservation status: unknown
Etymology:
x
Flowers:
The flowers are arranged singly on short side branches on a thin, pendulous pedicel 5–12 mm long
The calyx is green, broadly hemispherical, 3–5 mm long and the corolla is cylindrical or funnel-shaped, pink to red or orange, rarely white, 10–30 mm long with the stamens about the same length as the corolla
Flowering mainly occurs from April to September
Fruit:
x
Leaves:
The leaves are more or less glabrous, arranged in opposite pairs
Narrow oblong to broadly egg-shaped or trowel-shaped
10–20 mm long and 3–15 mm wide
On a petiole 3–5 mm long
Stem & branches:
x
Roots:
x
Habit:
A prostrate to erect shrub that typically grows to a height of 1 m and has smooth branchlets
Habitat:
x
Distribution:
Endemic to South Australia
Species:
World:
Australia:
Additional notes:
Taxonomy
Correa pulchella was first formally described in 1827 by Robert Sweet in his book Flora Australasica from an unpublished description by John Bain Mackay
The seeds had been collected on Kangaroo Island by William Baxter who had been sent to Australia by the plant collector Francis Henchman and grown by Mackay in his Clapton Nursery
Use in horticulture
Correa pulchella is regarded as one of the most attractive Correa species
It prefers dry summers with low humidity and well-drained alkaline soils
Propagation from seed is difficult, however semi-mature stem cuttings strike readily
It has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit
Cultivars include:
'Little Cate', a seedling selection of garden origin with prominently displayed bright pink flowers; it is thought to be a hybrid between two different forms
'Pink Mist', a pale-pink flowering form selected from a wild population on the southern Yorke Peninsula
'Dusky Bells', Correa pulchella × Correa reflexa