Qjure
HomeRemediesSearchJournal
Powered bySimilia
HomeRemediesSearchJournalAccount
Powered bySimilia
Qjure

The homeopathic encyclopedia. Explore remedies, read materia medica, and discover the classification system developed by Jan Scholten.

Platform

  • Remedies
  • Search
  • Journal
  • Membership

Legal

  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Terms

© 2026 Qjure. All rights reserved.

Powered bySimilia
Back to GrevilleoideaeAll kingdoms

Lambertia formosa

Kingdom
3Plants
Phylum
6Angiospermae
Class
4Fabanae
Subclass
3Proteidae
Phase
1Proteales
Subphase
2Grevilleoideae
Stage
17
Author

Qjure

Type

Info

Chapter

3-643.12.17

Book
Family
English: Mountain devil; Honey flower.
Name: formosa is Latin for handsome
Genus: 10 species.
Region: eastern Australia, New South Wales.
Habitat: heathland; mallee shrubland and dry sclerophyll, open forest; in sandstone-based soils, with good drainage; partly shaded to sunny.
Ecology: greatly resistant to the soil pathogen Phytophthora cinnamomi; caterpillars of Xylorycta strigata eat the leaves and make burrows in the wood; hosts the cup moth Mecytha fasciata.
Use: fruit for hand-crafted figures; pipe cleaners, wool and fabric scraps; honey.
Use: Australian Bush Flower Remedies.
BotanyShrub; multistemmed; ± 2 m.
Stem: woody base known as a lignotuber, from which it regrows after bushfire.
Leaves: stiff narrow; in whorls of 3, sometimes 4 to 6; linear to narrow-oblanceolate; 1 to 8 cm long and ± 5 mm wide; pointed tip or apex.
Inflorescences: pink to red flowerheads, with 7 individual tubular flowers; blooming in spring and summer.
Flowers: covered by greenish and reddish bracts; tubular perianths are 4.5 cm long; styles protruding another 1–1.5 cm beyond.
Fruit: woody; 2–3 by 1–2 cm; with 2, sharp, horny protuberances, ± 2 cm long, with a 0.5 cm 'beak', initially pale green, later grey-brown; with 2, flat, winged seeds, retained until burnt by fire.
Pollination: by honeyeaters.
  • 0 Kingdoms
  • ›3 Plants
  • ›6 Angiospermae
  • ›4 Fabanae
  • ›3 Proteidae
  • ›1 Proteales
  • ›2 Grevilleoideae