Xanthorrhoea sp.

Grass Tree at Pambula Beach, NSW

Xanthorrhoea sp. at Pambula Beach, NSW - suppressed
Xanthorrhoea sp. at Pambula Beach, NSW - suppressed
Xanthorrhoea sp. at Pambula Beach, NSW - suppressed
Request use of media

Identification history

Xanthorrhoea sp. 7 Feb 2025 plants
Xanthorrhoea sp. 7 Feb 2025 marcycad
Xanthorrhoea resinosa 9 Jan 2023 Tapirlord
Xanthorrhoea resinosa 8 Jan 2023 plants
Unidentified 8 Jan 2023 KylieWaldon

Identify this sighting


Please Login or Register to identify this sighting.

User's notes

big grassy plant with those long tall seeded things coming up out of the middle.

1 comment

marcycad wrote:
   6 Feb 2025
This is a very interesting sighting. The leaves appear too lax (arching over) to be X. resinosa, which typically exhibits tough leaves that radiate from the crown in an upright tuft relatively straight with little flexion. X. resinosa also usually produces single caudex, this has multiple crowns, more like that of X. concava, however the leaves seen very narrow for this species. It looks more like X. fulva, however this species does not occur this far south in NSW. This may be a narrow-leaved form of X. concava or perhaps an unreported hybrid between X. concava x australis.

Hybridisation in Xanthorrhoea does indeed occur, and is likely to be widespread where different species converge, however it does not appear to occur as extensively as is believed, this is because it can only transpire under very particular environmental conditions, such as where two species have overlapping geographical distributions alongside a coincidental flowering period in conjunction with where they meet across a transitional zone comprised of a gradual environmental gradient. i.e. areas bounded by two ecosystems or an ecocline, for instance a region between clay and sandy soils or wet and dry habitats. Fundamentally these are always environments comprised of conditions not preferred by either parent.
Morphological intergradation can also occur when two or perhaps more species are found within close proximity of each other, and populations displaying intermediate characteristics between species may be interpreted as hybridisation but may be the result of lateral gene transfer, which is the transfer of genetic material between two organisms. Molecular and genetical analysis could prove the best means with which to resolve the taxonomic problems associated with this genus.

Please Login or Register to comment.

Location information

Sighting information

Additional information

  • 1 metre to 5 metres Plant height

Species information

  • Xanthorrhoea sp. Scientific name
  • Grass Tree Common name
  • Sensitive
  • Local native
  • Non-invasive or negligible
  • Machine learning
  • In flower

Record quality

  • Images or audio
  • More than one media file
  • Verified by an expert moderator
  • Nearby sighting(s) of same species
  • GPS evidence of location
  • Description
  • Additional attributes
807,468 sightings of 21,928 species from 13,716 contributors
CCA 3.0 | privacy
We acknowledge the Traditional Owners of this land and acknowledge their continuing connection to their culture. We pay our respects to their Elders past and present.