About Bursaria incana Lindl.
Bursaria incana is a species that typically grows as a tall shrub or sparse tree, reaching a height of 3โ7 m (9.8โ23.0 ft). Most of its foliage is covered in soft hairs, and its young branchlets are spiny. Adult leaves of this plant are heart-shaped, lance-shaped, or egg-shaped with the narrower end oriented toward the base. They measure 60โ90 mm (2.4โ3.5 in) long and 6โ16 mm (0.24โ0.63 in) wide, and grow on a petiole less than 2 mm (0.079 in) long. The flowers are arranged in leafy clusters, with each flower borne on a pedicel less than 2 mm (0.079 in) long. It has five sepals that are 1โ2 mm (0.039โ0.079 in) long and separate from one another, and five white petals that spread out from the base and are 6.0โ7.5 mm (0.24โ0.30 in) long. The five stamens are separate from each other, and the pistil is densely covered in matted hairs. Flowering takes place in mid-summer, which coincides with the start of the dry season. The fruit is a flattened brown capsule 8โ10 mm (0.31โ0.39 in) long. This species of Bursaria is distributed across most of Queensland, excluding coastal regions and the arid inland, and has isolated populations in the northern part of the Northern Territory. It most commonly grows in open, grassy woodland and open forest.