DaveO Posted January 12, 2017 Share Posted January 12, 2017 Oldfield, D. 2016. Eremophila mackinlayi F. Muell. subsp. mackinlayi (Scrophulariaceae) Flowers photographed in visible and ultraviolet light. http://www.ultraviol...other-specimen/ Maldon, Victoria, Australia2 November 2016Australian Native Wildflower as Garden Specimen Comment We had been looking for E. mackinlayi ever since the post of a photograph of a specimen growing in Death Valley http://www.ultraviol...i-desert-pride/ but is not common in plant nurseries which we visited. The flowers on this specimen may be a little old leading to the petal tips being bent back rather than pointed as in the earlier photograph of the US specimen. Visible Light: Nikon D750 Full Spectrum Modification, Nikon Rayfact PF10545 MF-UV 105 mm f/4.5 lens, Metz 15 MS-1 flash, 1/200 s @ f/16 ISO 200, Baader UV/IR Cut Filter.Image Reference: DO63613 Ultraviolet Light: Nikon D750 Full Spectrum Modification, Nikon Rayfact PF10545 MF-UV 105 mm f/4.5 lens, Nissin Di866 Mark II flash, 1/200s @ f/16 ISO 200, Baader UV-Pass Filter.Image Reference: DO63615 Ultraviolet Induced Visible Fluorescence: Nikon D750 Full Spectrum Modification, Nikon Rayfact PF10545 MF-UV 105 mm f/4.5 lens with Baader UV/IR Cut Filter, Nichia NCSU033A UV-LED with Baader UV-Pass Filter, 10.0 s @ f/16 ISO 1600.Image Reference: DO63617 References:Chinnock, R.J. Eremophila and Allied Genera, Rosenberg, 2007, p. 469.Boschen, N., Goods, M. and Wait, R. Australia’s Eremophilas – changing gardens for a changing climate, Bloomings Books, 2008, p. 123.Brown, A. and Buirchell, B. A Field Guide to the Eremophilas of Western Australia, Simon Nevill Publications, 2011, p. 172. Published 12 January 2017 Link to comment
Andrea B. Posted January 12, 2017 Share Posted January 12, 2017 There it is!! My first Eremophila -- which took me months to identify because I saw this Australian native growing "out of place" in California. :D Thank you Dave for posting this. And to Sue for finding it. I also found this reference in an Australian flora: https://florabase.dpaw.wa.gov.au/browse/profile/7235 Link to comment
DaveO Posted January 12, 2017 Author Share Posted January 12, 2017 One of the many (?) problems with Eremophila ID is that they occur in many Australian States and the link is only for Western Australia. In fact, the distribution map actually corresponds to both subspecies when you compare it to the maps in Chinnock. The scatter on the west coast is subspecies mackinlayi and the ones further inland are the ones which Chinnock found for subsp. spathulata, described in 1990. I often have this problem when I look at the label on a bought plant and then go to Chinnock to find that the label only describes the nominate species. The third and most recent reference gives this subsp the name Desert Pride as you found it was known in the US, but not in either of the earlier references. Chinnock puts E. mackinlayi in section Hygrophanae which also contains E. hygrophana and E. strongylophylla to which it is closely allied and all three overlap in distribution - so identifying a specimen in the wild is not all that simple! Dave Link to comment
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