''Richea alpina'', known as short candleheath, is a species of
heath endemic to
Tasmania, occurring in the mountains of the southwest. It is morphologically similar to the hybrid species ''
Richea curtisiae
''Richea'' is a genus of 11 species of flowering plants in the family Ericaceae. Nine of the species are endemic to Tasmania and the other two are endemic to the south-east of the Australian mainland.
Species include:
*''Richea acerosa'' (Lin ...
'' which usually occurs after disturbance in the west and central mountains.
Description
''Richea alpina'' is a low growing (< high), sparsely branching shrub. The branches are usually covered by soil, making the above ground parts appear separate. The spreading leaves curve downwards and are crowded towards the ends of branches. They are generally long, wide with serrated margins and lance-shaped, tapering to a point at the end.
The inflorescence consists of numerous flowers in terminal, pyramidal panicles (many-branched inflorescences). The floral branches bear 5-18 flowers with leaf-like bracts. While similar to the foliage leaves, the lower bracts are smaller, more erect, and with membranous wings. The shorter upper bracts suddenly taper to an erect, acute point and are easily detached and shed early. The flowers are on pedicels long, with long broadly triangular sepals that are the same colour as the corolla, which can be pink, orange, or crimson. Each flower has 5 stamens which are red with long filaments attached slightly below the centre of long anthers. Flowering occurs from November to late January, ultimately producing capsules in diameter.
Habitat and distribution
Like most of the species in the genus ''
Richea'', ''R. alpina'' is endemic to Tasmania, and can be found in the mountains of the southwest, including the Frankland, Wilmot, Western and Eastern Arthur Ranges, and Mt Bobs.
As the name suggests, it occurs in exposed alpine moor and low shrubbery, often as solitary plants or forming low copses surrounded by ''
Empodisma minus''.
It can also sometimes be found in subalpine shrubbery
where it can grow taller ( high) due to being more protected. It occupies undisturbed sites, often isolated from ''
Richea scoparia'' and/or ''
Richea pandanifolia
''Richea pandanifolia'', the pandani or giant grass tree, is a distinctive endemic Tasmanian angiosperm. It is dicot of the family Ericaceae and is found in central, western and south west Tasmania. It is a favourite among hikers and nature love ...
''.
Taxonomy
Menadue and Crowden (2000) first formally described ''R. alpina'' after examining
flavonoid
Flavonoids (or bioflavonoids; from the Latin word ''flavus'', meaning yellow, their color in nature) are a class of polyphenolic secondary metabolites found in plants, and thus commonly consumed in the diets of humans.
Chemically, flavonoids ...
patterns in a taxonomic revision of the genus ''
Richea''. While morphologically similar to the hybrid species ''
R. curitsiae'' (''
R. scoparia x
R. pandanifolia''), flavonoid chemistry showed ''R. alpina'' had quite a different flavonoid pattern to ''
R. scoparia'' and ''
R. pandanifolia'', unlike ''
R. curtisiae'' which had the complement of both these species.
As well as the clear differentiation in flavonoid patterns, ''
R. curtisiae'' populations are small and ephemeral, showing continual establishment after disturbances such as fire, while the habitat of ''R. alpina'' is undisturbed, and populations are well established''.''
''
R. curtisiae'' populations also always occur in the vicinity of its parental species,
whereas ''R. alpina'' usually occurs in the absence of one or both of these species.
References
{{Taxonbar, from=Q17243237
Flora of Tasmania
alpina