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Boronia hoipolloi

Boronia hoipolloi is a plant in the citrus family Rutaceae and is endemic to a small area in Queensland. It is an erect or pendulous shrub with pinnate leaves and pink, four-petalled flowers. It is only known from a few collections near Mount Isa.

Description

Boronia hoipolloi is an erect shrub with pendulous branches up to long and with most of the plant, except the flowers, densely covered with star-like hairs. The leaves have between seven and twenty five leaflets and are long and wide in outline on a petiole long. The leaflets are linear to narrow elliptic, long and wide, the end leaflet longer than the last side leaflet but shorter than the others. The flowers are pink and are arranged singly or in groups of up to five in leaf s, the groups on a peduncle up to long. The four sepals are narrow triangular, long, wide and densely hairy. The four petals are long, wide and hairy on the back. The eight stamens are hairy with those opposite the sepals longer than those near the petals. Flowering occurs from May to June and the fruit is a mostly hairless capsule about long and wide.

Taxonomy and naming

Boronia hoipolloi was first formally described in 1999 by Marco F. Duretto who published the description in Austrobaileya. The specific epithet (hoipolloi) is derived from the Ancient Greek hoi polloi meaning "rabble", referring to the habitat of the type specimens "being found on the outer parts of an amphitheatre, where one expects to find 'the rabble' congregating".

Distribution and habitat

This boronia grows in crevices on sandstone cliffs and on scree slopes and is only known from an area north of a mining camp about north of Camooweal.

Conservation

Boronia hoipolloi is listed as "least concern" under the Queensland Government Nature Conservation Act 1992.

References