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Mullumbimby Creek, New South Wales, Australia
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Developing seed pods on the Tasmanian waratah. Most plants we have looked at this year have failed to set seed. This plant with a few pods for each inflorescence was doing very well.
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HMAS Creswell, Australian Capital Territory, Australia
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Queensland, Australia
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Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
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Proteaceae: Grevillea leptobotrys Dryandra formThis is a beautiful Grevillea which starts flowering this time of the year and goes through December. It grows in gravel soils and has the most sweet honey smell which attracts many bees. The flowers are darker pink when they first open, ageing to light pink.There are a number of leaf forms within this species. It grows up to 50 cm when growing in other shrubs but mostly up to 30cm (1ft). leptobotrys means "Thin bunch of grapes" in reference to the flowers
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Western Australia, Australia
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Fernkloof Nature Reserve, Hermanus, Western Cape, SOUTH AFRICA
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Blackheath, New South Wales, Australia
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Pincushion Coneflower (Isopogon dubius) in cultivation at Burrendong Arboretum near Wellington, New South Wales, Australia. Photographed on 11 October 1979. A native of Western Australia.This has been scanned in from a slide using an OTEK scanner. The original slide which is much higher quality, is held.
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New South Wales, Australia
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Ravensthorpe, Western Australia, Australia
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Buckinghamia celsissima (Ivory Curl) cultivated in a private garden in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. Photographed on 24 February 2008.
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Western Australia, Australia
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Western Australia, Australia
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Buds of the Lotus (Nelumbo nucifera) in the markets in Bangkok, Thailand. Photographed on 24 June 1987.A native of tropical Asia and Australia. It is a commonly cultivated fruit used throught south-east Asia.Digitised from a slide. The original slide, which is of higher quality, is held.
www.inaturalist.org/observations/47471360
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Lapataia, Tierra del Fuego Antartida e Islas Del Atlantico Sur, Argentina
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These delightful Hakea flowers were just starting to open and ranged from an almost white to dark pink. In the above photo they haven't released their pistils yet.A prickly shrub (Most Hakea's are prickly) to 3m tall. Name meaning: Hakea verrucosaHakea - after Baron von Hake, an 18th century German patron of botany; verrucose- warted, alluding to the woody fruits
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Cape Peninsula, Table Mountain NP, Western Cape, SOUTH AFRICA