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West Strahan, Tasmania, Australia
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Ashendon, Western Australia, Australia
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We found these plants growing around the edges of a large rock in Morawa. Stylidium ricae grows in a restricted area.Photo: Fred
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Stylidium beaugleholei is a tiny trigger plant growing in wetlands. Photo: Fred
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Stylidium rubricalyxA tiny trigger plant discovered and described by
Rica Erickson in the 1950's. It wasn't seen again until 2007. I took a photo
last year and we have been searching for this elusive plant this October with some success. It grows to 8cm.From the front, it looks like a little person talking to us. :-))Photo: Jean
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Tasmania, Australia
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Murrumbo, New South Wales, Australia
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The little bees were visiting the small Stylidium. The bees were small enough not to set off the 'trigger'. Photo: Jean
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A perennial plant growing to 50cm, often inside other plants. I love the little black dots in the centre of the throat of the plant. The little black dots are on hairs and are covered in a clear substance.
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Christmas Hills, Victoria, Australia
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Tasmania, Australia
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A small ephemeral plant which grows in winter wet areas with other Stylidium plants. This plant is very similar to
Stylidium emarginatum but has no throat appendages.
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Tianjara, New South Wales, Australia
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South Stirling, Western Australia, Australia
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I find this Stylidium quite grand as it can grow to nearly 1m tall with its yellow flowers up the flowering spike. The rosette of leaves at the base are unique with a membranous edge to the leaf. "Etymology. The specific epithet is taken from the Greek (hymen membranous, craspedus margined) in reference to the conspicuous hyaline leaf margin." Stylidium hymenocraspedum WegeNuytsia 16:250-252 (2006)Photo: Fred
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This bee visited many flowers, most flowers hitting the bee on its thorax with its irritable trigger before the bee moved onto another flower. Most of the time the bee moved on to a new flower very quickly. We noticed a couple of times that the trigger missed the bee, trapping it on the flower for a short while until it rolled over releasing itself from under the trigger. We saw two of these visiting the flowers
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Trigger Plant (Stylidium sp.) along coast north of Geraldton, Western Australia. Photographed on 24 August 1977.This is not one of the species listed for the area on the Atlas of Living Australia, however there are several undescribed species from the area of which this may be one.Digitised from a slide. The original slide, which is of higher quality
www.inaturalist.org/observations/49402446
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Summary[
edit] Description: Drawing of
Donatia fascicularis from the Endeavour voyage of James Cook at Terra del Fuego. Date: 1769. Source: Scan of original. Author: Sydney Parkinson. Permission (
Reusing this file): PD-old.
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Summary[
edit] Description: Matted Triggerplant, Stylidium repens, has flowers coloured from white through to pink. Talbot Road Reserve, Swan View, Western Australia, May 2012. Date: 27 May 2012, 10:32. Source:
Stylidium repens. Author:
John Tann from Sydney, Australia. Camera location
31° 52′ 15.2″ S, 116° 02′ 55.11″ E View all coordinates using:
OpenStreetMap-31.870888; 116.048642.
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