Scrophulariaceae Juss.
Eremophila calorhabdos Diels
, legitimate, scientific
[Diels, F.L.E. & Pritzel, E.G. (14 February 1905), Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae occidentalis. Beitrage zur Kenntnis der Pflanzen Westaustraliens, ihrer Verbreitung und ihrer Lebensverhaltnisse. Botanische Jahrbücher für Systematik, Pflanzengeschichte und Pflanzengeographie 35(4)]:
545, fig. 62 H, J.
[tax. nov.]
-
Type:
"In distr. Eyre ad fines distr. Coolgardie pr. Graspatch in fruticetis lutoso-arenosis flor. m. Nov. (D. 5288), 60 km a Frasers Range septentrionem orientalem versus (DEMPSTER in hb. Melb.!), Israelite Bay (Miss BROOKE 1893, in hb. Melb.!)."
[Kraenzlin, F.W.L. in Kraenzlin, F.W.L. (ed.) (1929), Repertorium Specierum Novarum Regni Vegetabilis Beihefte B. 54]:
116
[basionym]
basionym of:
Stenochilus calorhabdos (Diels) Kraenzl.
legitimate
[Barlow, B.A. (1971), Cytogeography of the genus Eremophila. Australian Journal of Botany 19(3)]:
296
[secondary reference]
[Grieve, B.J. & Blackall, W.E. (1982), How to know Western Australian wildflowers: a key to the flora of the extratropical regions of Western Australia Edn. 2, 4]:
650
[secondary reference]
common name:
Spiked Eremophila
[n/a]
[Green, J.W. (1985), Census of the Vascular Plants of Western Australia Edn. 2]:
152
[secondary reference]
[Paczkowska, G. & Chapman, A.R. (2000), The Western Australian Flora, a descriptive catalogue]:
333
[secondary reference]
[Chinnock, R.J. (2007), Eremophila and allied genera]:
569-571, Fig. 283, Map 288
APC
[secondary reference]
-
Lectotype:
Salmon Gum Farm, Western Australia, s.dat., Diels 5288 (B, destroyed; PERTH, lectotype here designated).
nomenclatural synonym:
Stenochilus calorhabdos (Diels) Kraenzl.
legitimate
common name:
spiked eremophila
[n/a]
common name:
Red rod
[n/a]
-
Etymology:
"After the genus Calorhabdos, beautiful wand."
[Brown, A. & Buirchell, B. (2011), A field guide to the eremophilas of Western Australia]:
53
[secondary reference]
common name:
Red Rod
[n/a]
-
Etymology:
"calorhabdos refers to the distinctive erect, wand-like branches which resemble those of the genus Calorhabdos."