Stylidiaceae R.Br.
Stylidium induratum M.B.Scott
, legitimate, scientific
[Scott, M.B. (1915), Decades Kewenses. Plantarum Novarum in Herbario Horti Regii Conservatarum. Decas LXXXIV. Bulletin of Miscellaneous Information, Royal Gardens, Kew 1915(2)]:
90
[tax. nov.]
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Type:
"WEST AUSTRALIA. Victoria Desert: Camp 54, Sept. R. Helms (Elder Exploring Expedition.)."
[Kenneally, K.F. & George, A.S in Jessop, J.P. (ed.) (1981), Stylidiaceae. Flora of Central Australia]:
362
[secondary reference]
[Green, J.W. (1985), Census of the Vascular Plants of Western Australia Edn. 2]:
161
[secondary reference]
[Lowrie, A.S., Burbidge, A.H. & Kenneally, K.F. (17 December 1999), A taxonomic revision of the creeping triggerplants (Stylidiaceae: Stylidium sect. Appressae) from southern Australia. Nuytsia 13(1)]:
128-131, Fig. 13
[secondary reference]
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Lectotype:
Victoria Desert: Camp 54 (Elder Exploring Expeditiona), [Mound Spruing, McKay's Creek, Western Australia, 29 S, 125 E], September [1891], R. Helms (lecto: K; isolecto: NSW 154814).
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Etymology:
The epithet induratum is from the Latin induratus - hardened, in reference to the hard white thickening (hyaline) of the leaf margins.
[Western Australian Herbarium (2011), FloraBase: the Western Australian Flora Version 2.6]:
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APC
[secondary reference]
common name:
Desert Triggerplant
[n/a]