Olearia ciliata, commonly known as the fringed daisy bush, is a small shrub with large clusters of bright purple-blue flowers on a single stem.
Description
Olearia ciliata is a small upright spreading shrub about high with more or less woody, wiry, reddish stems long. The stems are rough with short hairs and are finely ribbed usually branched from the base of the plant. The leaf upper side is bright green, rough or slightly smooth with a paler hairy underside, about long and sessile. The leaves are linear to narrow tapering gradually to a fine point or occasionally lobed at the apex long and wide. The leaf margins are entire, rough with short white hairs, rolled under and fringed. The single flowers are at the end of an unbranched peduncle long. The 3 green over-lapping
are woolly, narrow lance-shaped and fringed. The flowers are across with mauve to purple "petals" (strictly ligules of the ray florets) are long. The flower centre is yellow and consists of 40-75 disk florets. The fruit is a dry one-seeded capsule about long, smooth or with fine soft hairs and faint longitudinal lines. Flowers from late winter to spring on occasion in autumn.
Taxonomy and naming
Fringed daisy bush was first formally described in 1837 by George Bentham who gave it the name
Eurybia ciliata in
Stefan Endlicher's
Enumeratio plantarum quas in Novae Hollandiae ora austro-occidentali ad fluvium Cygnorum et in sinu Regis Georgii collegit Carolus Liber Baro de Hügel from specimens collected near King George Sound.
In 1867,
George Bentham changed the name to
Olearia ciliata in
Flora Australiensis.
The specific epithet (
ciliata) means "fringed with fine hairs"
and is derived from the
Latin word
cilium meaning "eyelash" or "eyelid".
Distribution and habitat
The fringed daisy-bush is a widespread species found in several southern Australian states predominantly on well-drained sandy soils. In Victoria it grows on sandy and mallee heath in the north-west of Victoria and scattered locations in the woodlands of the
Grampians, Brisbane Ranges and Wilsons Promontory.
In Western Australia it grows on rocky
lateritic or sandy soils on coastal dunes and sand plains mainly near Esperance and Albany.
In South Australia mostly on coastal fringes and in Tasmania along the east and south-east coast.