Chamomile Sunray (Rhodanthe anthemoides) in cultivation at Australian National Botanic Gardens, Canberra, ACT, Australia. Photographed on 29 Septeber 2004
Ascending Sunray (Rhodanthe diffusa subsp. diffusa) in the Spring Hill camping ground, Cocaparra National Park, E of Griffith, NSW, Australia. Photographed on 30 September 1978.Herb, flowers yellow. Abundant in open woodland.Voucher: A.D. Chapman 1399 (CANB 364177; CANB 364117; NSW 580731) identified as this species by Paul G. Wilson in 1991.Digitised from a slide. The original slide, which is of higher quality, is held.www.inaturalist.org/observations/47777734
A cultivar of the Camomile Sunray (Rhodanthe anthemoides cv. 'Rhotrail') commonly known as Paper Trail in cultivation in Ballan, Victoria, Australia. Photographed on 4 September 2011.The parent plant is a native of south-eastern Australia.
Rosy Everlasting (Rhodanthe chlorocephala subsp. rosea) cultivated at the Burrendong Arboretum near Wellington, New South Wales, Australia. Photographed on 7 October 1979.Digitised from a slide. The original slide, which is of higher quality, is held.
Summary[edit] Description: Native, cool season to yearlong green perennial, bushy, many-stemmed herb. Stems are slender, hairless to sparsely and finely pubescent and to 30 cm tall. Leaves are often crowded, thick, linear to narrow-oblong and about 10 mm long, with sessile sunken globose glands. Heads are solitary and terminal. Outer and intermediate involucral bracts are broad-elliptic, ciliate, pale brown with a purple midrib; inner involucral bracts have an elliptic white lamina. Florets are numerous, yellow and tubular. Flowering is mostly from early spring to mid-summer. Grows predominantly in montane rocky areas, often on sandy soils. Date: 19 September 2014, 10:54. Source: Rhodanthe anthemoides flowerhead1 NT. Author: Harry Rose from Dungog, Australia. Camera location30° 51′ 51.39″ S, 151° 33′ 10.83″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap - Google Earth-30.864275; 151.553007.
A cultivar of the Camomile Sunray (Rhodanthe anthemoides cv. 'Rhotrail') commonly known as Paper Trail in cultivation in Ballan, Victoria, Australia. Photographed on 4 September 2011.The parent plant is a native of south-eastern Australia.
Rosy Everlasting (Rhodanthe chlorocephala subsp. rosea) cultivated in the Australian National Botanic Gardens, Canberra, Australia. Photographed on 7 January 1972.Digitised from a slide. The original slide, which is of higher quality, is held.
Summary[edit] Description: Native, cool season to yearlong green perennial, bushy, many-stemmed herb. Stems are slender, hairless to sparsely and finely pubescent and to 30 cm tall. Leaves are often crowded, thick, linear to narrow-oblong and about 10 mm long, with sessile sunken globose glands. Heads are solitary and terminal. Outer and intermediate involucral bracts are broad-elliptic, ciliate, pale brown with a purple midrib; inner involucral bracts have an elliptic white lamina. Florets are numerous, yellow and tubular. Flowering is mostly from early spring to mid-summer. Grows predominantly in montane rocky areas, often on sandy soils. Date: 19 September 2014, 10:56. Source: Rhodanthe anthemoides flowerhead8 NT. Author: Harry Rose from Dungog, Australia. Camera location30° 51′ 51.39″ S, 151° 33′ 10.83″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap - Google Earth-30.864275; 151.553007.
A cultivar of the Camomile Sunray (Rhodanthe anthemoides cv. 'Rhotrail') commonly known as Paper Trail in cultivation in Ballan, Victoria, Australia. Photographed on 4 September 2011.The parent plant is a native of south-eastern Australia.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Rhodanthe floribunda beside the road towards Mount Oxley NSW Australia. Date: 14 April 2021, 15:23:16. Source: Own work. Author: Poyt448, Peter Woodard. Camera location30° 11′ 14″ S, 146° 14′ 23″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap-30.187222; 146.239722.
Summary[edit] Description: Native, cool season to yearlong green perennial, bushy, many-stemmed herb. Stems are slender, hairless to sparsely and finely pubescent and to 30 cm tall. Leaves are often crowded, thick, linear to narrow-oblong and about 10 mm long, with sessile sunken globose glands. Heads are solitary and terminal. Outer and intermediate involucral bracts are broad-elliptic, ciliate, pale brown with a purple midrib; inner involucral bracts have an elliptic white lamina. Florets are numerous, yellow and tubular. Flowering is mostly from early spring to mid-summer. Grows predominantly in montane rocky areas, often on sandy soils. Date: 19 September 2014, 10:57. Source: Rhodanthe anthemoides flowerhead bud1 NT. Author: Harry Rose from Dungog, Australia. Camera location30° 51′ 51.39″ S, 151° 33′ 10.83″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap - Google Earth-30.864275; 151.553007.
A cultivar of the Camomile Sunray (Rhodanthe anthemoides cv. 'Rhotrail') commonly known as Paper Trail in cultivation in Ballan, Victoria, Australia. Photographed on 4 September 2011.The parent plant is a native of south-eastern Australia.