Jacksonia

Grey stinkwood Jacksonia furcellata, copyright Margaret Donald.


Belongs within: Papilionoideae.

Jacksonia is a genus of leguminous shrubs and small trees endemic to Australia. Most species appear leafless with rigid stems and leaves reduced to small scales.

<==Jacksonia Br. ex Aiton 1811 KC01
    |--J. alata OS04
    |--J. argentea LK14
    |--J. floribunda RL05
    |--J. forrestii LK14
    |--J. furcellata RL05
    |--J. racemosa OS04
    |--J. restioides RL05
    |--J. rupestris LK14
    |--J. scoparia M65
    |--J. spinosa CFH05
    `--J. sternbergiana RL05

Nomen nudum: Jacksonia sparsa Gibson & Keighery 2000 GK00

*Type species of generic name indicated

REFERENCES

[CFH05] Cochrane, J. A., J. A. Friend & S. J. E. Hill. 2005. Endozoochory and the Australian bluebell: comsumption of Billardiera fusiformis (Labill.) Payer (Pittosporaceae) seeds by three mammal species at Two Peoples Bay Nature Reserve, Western Australia. Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia 88 (4): 191–196.

[GK00] Gibson, N., & G. J. Keighery. 2000. Flora and vegetation of the Byenup-Muir reserve system, south-west Western Australia. CALMScience 3 (3): 323–402.

[KC01] Kirk, P. M., P. F. Cannon, J. C. David & J. A. Stalpers. 2001. Ainsworth & Bisby's Dictionary of the Fungi 9th ed. CAB International: Wallingford (UK).

[LK14] Lyons, M. N., G. J. Keighery, L. A. Gibson & T. Handasyde. 2014. Flora and vegetation communities of selected islands off the Kimberley coast of Western Australia. Records of the Western Australian Museum Supplement 81: 205–244.

[M65] Michener, C. D. 1965. A classification of the bees of the Australian and South Pacific regions. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 130: 1–362.

[OS04] Obbens, F. J., & L. W. Sage. 2004. Vegetation and flora of a diverse upland remnant of the Western Australian wheatbelt (Nature Reserve A21064). Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia 87 (1): 19–28.

[RL05] Rafferty, C., & B. B. Lamont. 2005. Selective feeding by macropods on vegetation regenerating following fire. Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia 88 (4): 155–165.

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