Pimelea curviflora R.Br. is a plant in the Thymelaeaceae family, order Malvales, kingdom Plantae. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Pimelea curviflora R.Br. (Pimelea curviflora R.Br.)
๐ŸŒฟ Plantae

Pimelea curviflora R.Br.

Pimelea curviflora R.Br.

Pimelea curviflora (curved rice-flower) is a variable hairy Australian woody shrub with several varieties occupying different ranges and habitats.

Family
Genus
Pimelea
Order
Malvales
Class
Magnoliopsida
โš ๏ธ Toxicity Note

Insufficient toxicity evidence; avoid direct contact and ingestion.

About Pimelea curviflora R.Br.

Pimelea curviflora R.Br., commonly known as curved rice-flower, is a small woody understory shrub that grows 20โ€“150 cm (7.9โ€“59.1 in) tall, with soft hairy stems. Its yellowish-green leaves are elliptic, lance-shaped, or egg-shaped, measuring 5โ€“20 mm (0.20โ€“0.79 in) long and 2โ€“8 mm (0.079โ€“0.315 in) wide, and are hairy on both sides. Leaves are arranged in opposite pairs or alternately, borne on a short petiole, and end in a pointed tip. Hairs on the upper leaf surface are spreading or flattened, becoming silky, short, and somewhat less twisted; the upper leaf surface is either smooth or covered with shorter hairs. Leaf color may be uniform, or vary between the upper and lower surfaces. The plant produces 6 to 20 compact green-yellow, sometimes reddish, flowers that are either female or bisexual. Each flower has a 5โ€“12 mm (0.20โ€“0.47 in) long floral tube that flares at the tip and is usually hairy. Flowers are arranged in heads at the end of branches or in leaf axils. Flower bracts may be absent or not conspicuous. The style is 2โ€“5 mm (0.079โ€“0.197 in) long, sometimes shorter in female flowers, and pedicels are hairy. The dry, green fruit are 2โ€“4 mm (0.079โ€“0.157 in) long. Flowering occurs from late spring to early summer. Curved rice-flower is a variable, widespread species that grows in New South Wales, south-eastern South Australia, and south-eastern Queensland, on or near the Great Dividing Range and in coastal areas from Brisbane to Adelaide. It also grows in Victoria (including montane woodland, where it is common and widespread) and Tasmania. It inhabits forests, grassland, and woodlands among acacia, eucalypt, and callitris, usually growing on clay and shale soils, and also occurs in rainforest among vine thickets. Several varieties have distinct ranges and habitats: Variety acuta grows in forest and woodland at altitudes between 750 and 1,500 m (2,460 and 4,920 ft), ranging from near Mount Kosciuszko to the Budawang Range in New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory. Variety curviflora is restricted to coastal areas around Sydney, where it grows on sandstone. Variety divergens is widespread across the coast, ranges, and western slopes from the Boyne River in Queensland to the Sydney region. Variety gracilis usually grows in forest, sometimes on rocky sites, and is widespread from extreme south-eastern Queensland, through eastern New South Wales and southern Victoria, to south-eastern South Australia and northern Tasmania. Variety sericea grows in sandy soil in open forest, and is widespread from extreme south-eastern Queensland, through eastern New South Wales and Victoria, to south-eastern South Australia and the Furneaux Group islands in Tasmania. Variety subglabrata grows in scrub and pastures from the Goulburn River to Nowra in New South Wales.

Photo: (c) Hauke Koch, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Hauke Koch ยท cc-by-nc

Taxonomy

Plantae โ€บ Tracheophyta โ€บ Magnoliopsida โ€บ Malvales โ€บ Thymelaeaceae โ€บ Pimelea

More from Thymelaeaceae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy ยท Disclaimer

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