Английская Википедия:Cyanothamnus coerulescens

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Cyanothamnus coerulescens, commonly known as blue boronia,[1] is a plant in the citrus family, Rutaceae and is endemic to southern Australia. It is a small, spindly shrub with glandular stems, small, more or less cylindrical leaves and blue to pinkish mauve, four-petalled flowers. There are two subspecies endemic to Western Australia and a third that also occurs in three eastern states.

Description

Cyanothamnus coerulescens is an erect shrub that grows to a height of Шаблон:Convert with branchlets that are warty glandular. The leaves are usually simple, (sometimes with three lobes), more or less cylindrical in shape to narrow oblong or elliptic, Шаблон:Convert long and Шаблон:Convert wide. The flowers are bright blue, lilac-coloured or white and are arranged singly in leaf axils or in dense, leafy spikes on the end of the branches. Each flower has a pedicel Шаблон:Convert long. The four sepals are triangular to broadly egg-shaped, Шаблон:Convert long with their bases overlapping. The four petals are more or less egg-shaped with a small, pointed tip, Шаблон:Convert long with their bases overlapping. The eight stamens and the style are slightly hairy. Flowering mostly occurs from August to November and the fruit are Шаблон:Convert long with the petals remaining on the end.[1][2][3][4]

Taxonomy and naming

Blue boronia was first formally described in 1854 by Ferdinand von Mueller who gave it the name Boronia coerulescens in Transactions of the Philosophical Society of Victoria.[5][6] In a 2013 paper in the journal Taxon, Marco Duretto and others changed the name to Cyanothamnus bussellianus on the basis of cladistic analysis.[7] The specific epithet (coerulescens) is a Latin word caeruleus meaning "sky blue"[8] with the ending -Шаблон:Lang signifying "beginning of" or "becoming".[8]Шаблон:Rp

In 2019, Paul Graham Wilson described three subspecies in the journal Nuytsia. The names have subsequently been changed to reflect the change in the genus name:[3]

  • Cyanothamnus coerulescens F.Muell. subsp. coerulescens (the autonym) has flowers in leaf axils;
  • Cyanothamnus coerulescens subsp. spicatus (Paul G.Wilson) Duretto & Heslewood that has flowers in dense, leafy, spike-like racemes;[9]
  • Cyanothamnus coerulescens subsp. spinescens (Benth.) Duretto & Heslewood, originally described in 1863 as Boronia spinescens by George Bentham,[10][11] is a variable subspecies with spreading, often pungent branchlets and is similar to subspecies coerulescens.

Distribution and habitat

Blue boronia grows in mallee woodland. Subspecies coerulescens occurs in the south-west of Western Australia, in South Australia, Victoria and in the far south-west of New South Wales. Subspecies spicata occurs in Western Australia between Wubin and Muntadgin and spinescens is found in similar areas to subspecies coerulescens but only in Western Australia.[1][2][4][12]

Conservation

All three subspecies of C. coerulescens are classified as "not threatened" by the Western Australian Government Department of Parks and Wildlife.[12][13][14][15]

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:Taxonbar