Fuzzy New Holland Daisy

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Vittadinia cuneata


Rounded perennial herb or subshrub. Stems and leaves covered with straight stiff hairs tipped with a gland (glandular). Small daisy flowers with mauve petals (ray florets) and fluffy seedheads.


Details
Flora Type
Herbs
Former Scientific Name
Vittadinia cuneata var. cuneata
Other Common Names
Fuzzweed
Distinctive Features

Broad wedge-shaped leaves up to 2 cm long, usually folded together lengthways, with two pairs of teeth in the margin above the middle of the leaf. Straight stiff hairs on stem.

Biology

Perennial herb or subshrub. Short-lived. Clay soils and loams in grasslands, forest and woodlands. Fluffy seeds dispersed by wind.

Native Status
Native
Flowering Time

Oct-Mar

Taxonomy
Phylum
Tracheophyta (Vascular Plants)
Class
Equisetopsida
Order
Asterales
Family
Asteraceae
Genus
Vittadinia
Species
cuneata

Some can only be identified using a hand lens looking at the shape and texture of the seed. After the Italian fungi expert Carlo Vittadini (1800-1865).


Interesting Facts
Similar Species

There are a number of varieties within this species. Very similar to V. gracilis but distinguished by stiff hairs on the stem and leaves whilst V. gracilis has white soft cottony hairs.

Native Status
Native