Gastrolobium bilobum
Gastrolobium bilobum, commonly known as Heart-leaved Poison, is a bushy shrub which is endemic to south west Western Australia. The species is a member of the family Fabaceae and is probably the most toxic species in the genus Gastrolobium, containing high levels of monofluroacetic acid. The species grows to a height of up to 4 metres. Between late winter and early summer (August to December in Australia) it produces yellow-orange pea-flowers with a central yellow area encircled by a band of red, and a maroon keel. The leaves are cuneiform, obovate or elliptic.
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Gastrolobium bilobum
Gastrolobium bilobum, commonly known as Heart-leaved Poison, is a bushy shrub which is endemic to south west Western Australia. The species is a member of the family Fabaceae and is probably the most toxic species in the genus Gastrolobium, containing high levels of monofluroacetic acid. The species grows to a height of up to 4 metres. Between late winter and early summer (August to December in Australia) it produces yellow-orange pea-flowers with a central yellow area encircled by a band of red, and a maroon keel. The leaves are cuneiform, obovate or elliptic.
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Gastrolobium bilobum, commonly ...... well as mallee and heathland.
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Gastrolobium bilobum
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An illustration from Curtis's Botanical Magazine .
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Gastrolobium bilobum
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Gastrolobium bilobum, commonly ...... uneiform, obovate or elliptic.
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Gastrolobium bilobum
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Heart-leaved Poison
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