Rare in Victoria, Muehlenbeckia diclina subsp. 1 is one of two subspecies of Muehlenbeckia diclina. https://vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au/flora/taxon/fd6d15b4-24c5-49fd-898e-aa22747cebe3
ALA use the name Muehlenbeckia diclina subsp. Gippsland.
At this site the plant grows along approx 200m of roadside (mostly on down slope side, but a few up on embankment)
Rare in Victoria, Muehlenbeckia diclina subsp. 1 (Slender Lignum) is one of two subspecies of Muehlenbeckia diclina. https://vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au/flora/taxon/fd6d15b4-24c5-49fd-898e-aa22747cebe3
ALA use the name Muehlenbeckia diclina subsp. Gippsland. This plant and others nearby are vigorously regrowing post fire (burnt March 2019).
Nut obovoid to globose, 1.3–2.2 mm long, 0.9–1.5 mm diam., strongly rugose, dull, yellowish to mid-brown, with papillose base and paler papillose and hispid apex. Sheath pale to mid-brown with reddish tinges, dull.
Previously to Jervis Bay
This is the 3rd time I have run across this cryptic little sedge in escarpment bogs (this one being at 920m elevation). The first time I sent a specimen to Sydney RBG who ID'd it as O. distichus. It appears to be uncommon, although hard to spot among taller sedges.
Growing in a small farm dam with Eleocharis sphacelata. I thought it might be Schoenoplectus pungens, whatever that is called now, although the culms were more yellow-green than blue-green. Didn't have a camera with me, so no in situ photos. It was forming small tussocks about 70cm high around the dam margins.
Growing in a small farm dam with Eleocharis sphacelata. I thought it might be Schoenoplectus pungens, whatever that is called now, although the culms were more yellow-green than blue-green. Didn't have a camera with me, so no in situ photos. It was forming small tussocks about 70cm high around the dam margins.
Not sure between M. gunnii and M. nuda, but I think the tussocks were large enough that it has to be gunnii (nuda leaves to 40cm long in NSW Flora, these would have been closer to 100cm). Some inflorescences straight, some flexuous. Nuts shiny, smooth, almost black, no hypogynous bristles. In drier grassy areas of a montane bog at about 900m elevation.
In a damp depression in a dune swale at the mouth of Wallagoot Lake. Tiny rhizomatous sedge was the most abundant species in the wettest bit, with Hydrocotyle bonariensis and Cyperus polystachyos.