Appearance
''Ammobium alatum'' is a species of perennial herb, occasional an annual, that typically grows to a height of 60–100 cm with winged, woolly-hairy, usually much-branched stems. Most of its leaves are at the base of the plant and are narrow egg-shaped to narrow triangular.The basal leaves are 40–60 mm long and 10–15 mm wide on a petiole 70–100 mm long. There are a few sessile, bract-like leaves on the stems. The flowers are 10–20 mm wide with bright yellow florets that become darker with age, the corolla about 5 mm long.
The florets are surrounded by papery, white involucral bracts 5–10 mm long with jagged edges. Flowering mainly occurs from November to April and the cypselas are linear, wrinkled and dark brown with an awn up to 1 mm long.
Naming
The genus ''Ammobium'' and ''Ammobium alatum'' were first described in 1824 Robert Brown in ''Curtis Botanical Magazine''. The name ''Ammobium'' is from the Greek words, ''ammos'' and ''bios'' , describing the genus as growing in sand, and the specific epithet ''alatum'' is from the Latin ''alatus'' meaning "winged" in reference to its winged stems.Distribution
The winged everlasting often grows in disturbed environments such as on roadsides and agricultural land, and sometimes on riverbanks where the seeds have been carried from disturbed areas. Records of this species in natural habitats are from eucalypt forests in plateau and rocky cliffs in northern New South Wales, from river banks in the upper Snowy River in Victoria, from the Northern Tablelands and North West Slopes of New South Wales and from south-east Queensland. Robert Brown found it "growing plentifully near the shores of Port Hunter in New South Wales" in 1804. The species is naturalised in South Australia, The Australian Capital Territory and Tasmania, and in places outside its natural distribution in New South Wales.References:
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