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Scientific Name
Synonyms
Family
Common Names
Origin
Cultivation
Naturalised Distribution
Habitat
Habit
Distinguishing Features
Seedling
Stems and Leaves
Flowers and Fruit
Reproduction and Dispersal
Environmental Impact
Other Impacts
Legislation
Management
Similar Species
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Click on images to enlarge

infestation (Photo: Sheldon Navie)

habit (Photo: Sheldon Navie)

habit (Photo: Sheldon Navie)

younger stems and leaves with wavy margins (Photo: Sheldon Navie)

close-up of leaves and flower buds (Photo: Forest and Kim Starr, USGS)

branched flower clusters (Photo: Sheldon Navie)

coiled branches of the flower clusters (Photo: Sheldon Navie)

close-up of tubular flowers with yellow throats (Photo: Sheldon Navie)

immature fruit (Photo: Sheldon Navie)

seedling (Photo: Sheldon Navie)

Heliotropium amplexicaule

Scientific Name

Heliotropium amplexicaule Vahl

Synonyms

Cochranea anchusaefolia (Poir.) Gurke
Cochranea anchusifolia (Poir.) Gurke
Heliotropium anchusaefolium Poir.
Heliotropium anchusifolium Poir.
Tournefortia heliotropioides Hook.

Family

Boraginaceae

Common Names

blue heliotrope, clasping heliotrope, creeping heliotrope, heliotrope, purpletop, summer heliotrope, turnsole, violet heliotrope, wild heliotrope, wild verbena

Origin

Native to South America (i.e. northern and central Argentina, southern Bolivia, Uruguay and southern Brazil).

Cultivation

Blue heliotrope (Heliotropium amplexicaule) was introduced into Australia in the late 19th century as a garden ornamental. However, it is rarely deliberately cultivated as a garden ornamental these days.

Naturalised Distribution

This species is widely naturalised throughout the eastern and south-eastern parts of Australia. It is particularly widespread and common in the coastal and sub-coastal regions of southern Queensland and northern New South Wales, and is relatively common in south-eastern South Australia and in other parts of New South Wales and Queensland. Also recorded from other parts of South Australia and sparingly naturalised in northern Victoria.

Habitat

A weed of pastures, crops and fallows, roadsides, footpaths, lawns, parks, gardens, disturbed sites, waste areas, open woodlands and grasslands in the warmer temperate, sub-tropical and semi-arid regions of Australia.

Habit

A long-lived (i.e. perennial) herbaceous plant with creeping (i.e. prostrate) branched stems that radiate outwards from a woody rootstock. It generally grows only 15-30 cm tall.

Distinguishing Features

Seedling

The two seed leaves (i.e. cotyledons) are egg-shaped in outline (i.e. ovate) and borne on relatively long stalks (i.. petioles). They have rounded tips (i.e. obtuse apices) and are about 6mm long by 3 mm wide. The first ture leaves are oval (i.e. elliptic) to egg-shaped in outline (i.e. ovate) with prominent indented veins. They are sparsely and softly hairy (i.. sparsely pubescent) and borne on short stalks (i.e. petioles).

Stems and Leaves

The branching stems are green, very hairy (i.e. pubescent), and grow up to 1 m long.

The alternately arranged leaves do not have distinct stalks (i.e. they are sessile or sub-sessile), and the bases of some leaves are stem-clasping (i.e. ). These leaves (20-80 mm long and 3-20 mm wide) are hairy (i.e. pubescent) and elongated in shape (i.e. oblanceolate to lanceolate). They have prominent veins, wavy (i.e. undulate) margins and pointed or rounded tips (i.e. acute or obtuse apices). The upper leaf surfaces are dull green in colour, while the lower surfaces are paler green.

Flowers and Fruit

The small tubular flowers (4-6 mm long and 3-6 mm across) are arranged in two rows along one side of a coiled flower spike (i.e. boragoid inflorescence). However, these flower spikes straighten and elongate as the fruit mature. The flowers are purple, lilac, blue or pinkish in colour and have a distinctive yellowish throat. They are made up of five petals that are fused into a tube (i.e. corolla tube) for most of their length, and are surrounded by five green hairy sepals (about 3.5 mm long). Each flower also has five small stamens inside the flower tube and a four-lobed ovary topped with a very short style and broad hairy stigma. Flowering occurs throughout most of the year, but is most apparent from late spring through until early autumn.

The fruit consists of two small 'seeds' (i.e. nutlets or mericarps) which separate from each other at maturity. The 'seeds' are rounded (i.e. sub-globular) in shape and have a wrinkled (i.e. rugose) or warty (i.e. tuberculate) surface. They are dark brown or black in colour and hairless (i.e. glabrous).

Reproduction and Dispersal

This plant reproduces mostly by seed, but can also produce shoots from its roots and establish from root fragments.

The seeds may dispersed by animals, water, vehicles, and in contaminated soil and agricultural produce (e.g. fodder). Root fragments can be broken off and spread about during cultivation or road maintenance, and may also be dispersed longer distances in contaminated soil.

Environmental Impact

Blue heliotrope (Heliotropium amplexicaule) is regarded as an environmental weed in New South Wales, Queensland and South Australia. Though it is mainly seen as a weed of roadsides, disturbed sites and pastures, it is also listed as a priority environmental weed in three Natural Resource Management regions. It displaces native species, particularly in overgrazed or otherwise disturbed areas, and prefers sandy soils.

This species is currently of most concern in the inland regions of New South Wales, and is conservatively estimated to occupy more than 110,000 hectares in this state. Major infestations occur in areas receiving more than 500 mm of rainfall per year, although it is also established in low rainfall areas in the western districts of the state. Blue heliotrope (Heliotropium amplexicaule) is listed as an environmental weed in some inland areas of this state (e.g. in the Hawkesbury region and the Namoi catchment) and has invaded conservation areas, particularly in the northern parts of the state.

For example, in the Warrumbungle National Park, in Northern Plains region, blue heliotrope (Heliotropium amplexicaule) is dominant in the Central Valley section of the park. Populations also occur on grazing areas adjacent to the Pilliga Nature Reserve in this region. This species out-competes more palatable species grazed by native herbivores, and its dominance in certain areas is linked to excessive grazing pressure by heavy concentrations of eastern grey kangaroos (Macropus giganteus). Blue heliotrope (Heliotropium amplexicaule) also occurs in the Merriwa River and Death Adder areas of the Goulburn River National Park in the Mudgee region.

This exotic species also out-competes native ground species in woodland vegetation of the Cumberland Plains region, west of Sydney, and is a weed in sites occupied by the endangered herb Zieria obcordata, near Wellington and Bathurst in inland southern New South Wales.

Blue heliotrope (Heliotropium amplexicaule) is also considered to be a threat to rangeland biodiversity in Queensland and has invaded conservation areas in South Australia (e.g. Ferguson Conservation Park, Morialta Conservation Park and Onkaparinga River Recreation Park).

Other Impacts

In northern New South Wales and southern Queensland, blue heliotrope (Heliotropium amplexicaule) has undergone rapid recent spread in both cultivated pastures and crops. It is considered to be a serious weed in pastures in these areas, because it competes with desirable summer pasture species and significantly reduces pasture productivity. It is also poisonous to livestock, especially young cattle.

This species is as a major weed of crops in the Darling Downs and Burnett regions, in south-eastern Queensland, and northern New South Wales. It is also a less important weed of crops in other parts of Queensland (i.e. on the Western Downs, in the Moreton district, and in central Queensland).

Legislation

This species is declared under legislation in the following states and territories:

Management

For information on the management of this species see the following resources:

Similar Species

Blue heliotrope (Heliotropium amplexicaule) is similar to common heliotrope (Heliotropium europaeum), Indian heliotrope (Heliotropium indicum) and smooth heliotrope (Heliotropium curassavicum). They can be istinguished by the following differences:

It is also relatively similar to the yellow burrweeds (Amsinckia spp.) and some of the low-growing verbenas (Verbena spp.), as they also have similar tubular flowers. However, the yellow burrweeds (Amsinckia spp.) are upright (i.e. erect) or semi-upright (i.e. ascending) plants with pale yellow to orange tubular flowers. The verbenas (Verbena spp.) do not have coiled flower clusters and their leaves usually have toothed or highly divided margins.