Marble Gum
Boab or Adansonia
Sturt's Desert pea
Gidgee or Stinking Wattle
Green Bird Flower or Rattlepod
Sundew
Macrozamia dyeri or Zamia Palm
Honeysuckle Oak or Spider Flower, Desert Grevillea
Coast Banksia, White Honeysuckle
Frankenia (no common name)
Christmas Tree Mulga
Koch's Pigface
Flannel Flower
Red Flowered Kurrajong
Queen of Sheba Orchid
Drummond's Everlasting Daisy, Pompom daisy
Coolibah (or Coolabah)
Prostrate creeper. Leaves oval to lance shaped. Flower heads made of many small flowers. The heads have a fluffy appearance due to feathery bracts surrounding the small flowers.
Flowers about 2cm across. Petals with bright orange/red spots. One or two furry leaves. Often flowering in colonies.
Terrestrial orchid. Green labellum with black central stripe. Locally common in moist forests.
Short tufted plants with strap-like leaves to 20cm.
Low soft shrub. Elongated, grey leaves.
Dense low shrub to 50cm high. Leaves deeply lobed, prickly.
Tuberous, perennial, herb, 0.25-0.7 m high. Fl. green & red, Nov to Dec or Jan to Apr. White-grey sand, loam, granite. Sand dunes, outcrops, swamps.
Grows to 35cm in height. Early Flowering
This conspicuous daisy has large flowers about 5cm across. The scrambling plant climbs over adjoining shrubs and displays its flowers during winter and spring.
Medium sized tree growing on heavy soil regions of inland Australia that are subject to seasonal flooding. Bark on trunk is dark grey, fibrous and flaking.
Soft shrub to about 1m. Mauve/pink 4-petalled flowers in spring.
Low shrub. Leaves greyish, strongly serrated. Flowers orange/yellow. Growing on sand dune.
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