Drummond's Everlasting Daisy, Pompom daisy
Splendid Everlasting
Sand Sunray, Teitkens Daisy
Common Cassinia or Dogwood
Fleshy Groundsel or Annual Yellowtop
Silver Snow Daisy
Fringed Daisy Bush - Kangaroo Island Endemic
Poached Egg Daisy,
Large-leaf Daisy-bush
Azure Daisy Bush
Flannel Cudweed
Simpson Desert Daisy - Yellow Billybutton
Goldfields Daisy
Poached Egg Daisy
Common Everlasting
Erodiophyllum elderi - Hard Heads
Much-branched Daisybush
Orange Immortelle
Pink Daisy - Streptoglossa sp.
Shark Bay Daisy
Springtime splendour, when vast areas of red sand come alight with these amazing everlastings. Slender upright herb, leaves elongated. Flowers in heads 2 to 3cm across that can be white,
Annual herb, stems erect, 5–30 cm long, nearly glabrous to cottony. Leaves lanceolate to linear, 4–34 mm long, c. 0.5–4 mm wide, midrib ± prominent on lower surface, glabrous to cottony,
Erect annual, herb, 0.1-0.45 m high. Fl. yellow, Jul to Nov. Red sand, lateritic pebbly soils. Dunes, sandplains.
Perennial woody forb to 50cm tall. Leaves alternating up the stems, 4-10cm long, 20-30mm wide, flat, hairy to bristly, deeply lobed, the lobes toothed. Flower heads with 15-25 violet to purple,
Erect, fleshy annual, herb, to 1 m high. Fl. yellow, May to Oct. Red or brown or white-grey clay, red sands or loams, laterite, sandstone. Flats, dunes, depressions, saline sites, clay pans,
Dwarf undershrub to 25cm high, with rough hairy stems and tightly compacted, tiny leaves.
Xerochrysum bracteatum, the "Golden Everlasting", is one of the best known of the "paper daisies". It is a very widespread species occurring in both annual and perennial forms.
Low growing plant with slightly hairy, sticky leaves.
Goldfields Daisy commonly grows into compact round shrubs about half a metre in height. The small leaves are flat, stiff and slightly viscid (sticky). The flowerheads are over 2 cm diameter,
A shrub to 2 m high that grows in moist sub-alpine gullies. Leaves alternate or opposite, 20–120 mm long, 6–28 mm wide; margins entire, flat; apex acute or rounded; surfaces discolorous,
The Much-branched Daisybush is a low shrub although it can grow to over 1 metre under favourable conditions. The very small leaves are 2 mm in length and are covered in fine woolly hairs that help
Prostrate to decumbent annual, herb, 0.01-0.12 m high. Fl. yellow, Jul to Oct. Red sand or loam, granitic soils. Variety of habitats.
Perennial herb to 40 cm high with fleshy tuberous roots. Leaves all basal, linear-lanceolate or oblanceolate, 4–30 cm long, 2–15 mm wide, apex acute, base tapered,
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