Shawia ledifolia (DC.) Sch.Bip.

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Credits

Article from Bean's Trees and Shrubs Hardy in the British Isles

Recommended citation
'Shawia ledifolia' from the website Trees and Shrubs Online (treesandshrubsonline.org/articles/shawia/shawia-ledifolia/). Accessed 2025-07-09.

Family

  • Asteraceae

Genus

Synonyms

  • Aster ledifolius A.Cunn. ex DC.
  • Olearia ledifolia (DC.) Benth.

Glossary

endemic
(of a plant or an animal) Found in a native state only within a defined region or country.

References

There are no active references in this article.

Credits

Article from Bean's Trees and Shrubs Hardy in the British Isles

Recommended citation
'Shawia ledifolia' from the website Trees and Shrubs Online (treesandshrubsonline.org/articles/shawia/shawia-ledifolia/). Accessed 2025-07-09.

A low shrub, forming rounded clumps 1 to 2 ft high. Leaves alternate, crowded, sessile, oblong-linear, blunt or rounded at the tip, 38 to 114 in. long, leathery, with revolute margins, green above, silvery or rusty tomentose beneath. Flower-heads solitary in the axils of leaves near the ends of the branches, on short peduncles. Involucral bracts narrow-oblong, tomentose. Ray-florets ten to twelve, white. Curtis, Endem. Fl. Tasmania, Part I, No 16.

An endemic of Tasmania. Seeds of this species were sent by Harold Comber during his expedition to Tasmania 1929–30. In his Field Notes he wrote: ‘Common at 3,500–4,000 ft in most exposed places on moors, rocky forests or hill-sides. Will be rather slow growing, but good on the rock garden. Probably will appreciate some peat. Should be perfectly hardy.’ Comber rated it highly, but it has never become established in cultivation.


O pinifolia (Hook, f.) Benth.

Synonyms
Eurybia pinifolia Hook. f

A rigid shrub 3 to 9 ft high, in aspect like a small pine; leaves linear, with revolute margins, up to 1{3/4} in. long, with sharp pungent tips. Flower-heads rather larger than in O. ledifolia, with eight to twelve ray-florets. Curtis, Endem. Fl. Tasmania, Part I, No 14.An endemic of Tasmania, introduced in 1930 by Harold Comber.