The desert raisin is a member of Australia’s native bush tomato family.
Mark Marathon/Wikimedia, CC BY
Tasting like a smoky sundried tomato, the desert raisin has been a staple for Australian desert communities for thousands of years.
Flowers of the mystical Hildegardia australiensis . I.D. Cowie, NT Herbarium.
Author provided (No reuse)
With unusual inflated winged fruits growing on “sickness country”, the tree flummoxed local botanists who had not seen anything like it before.
Dr Michael Whitehead is campaigning to rename the Gimlet Gum to the Sexy Gum.
Author provided (No reuse)
The Instagram-able Eucalyptus salubris, better known as the Gimlet Gum, is well worth getting off the beaten track for.
Swamp foxtail is prized in ornamental gardens across Australia.
John Tann/Flickr
Present in Asia and Australia, the origins of swamp foxtails have not always been clear. Genetic studies put uncertainties to rest.
John Tann/Flickr
What grows everywhere and looks good doing it? Clematis aristata.
Silver moss can survive almost total dehydration.
HermannSchachner/Wikipedia
The moss that grows in pavement cracks and on the edge of basketball courts in every town and city in Australia has a secret superpower.
This guinea flower is called ‘fierce’ after its sharp, painful needles.
The Conversation/Shutterstock
The guinea flower grows right across Australia.
Michael Yuen/Flickr
During its first few decades, this tree is the runt of the rainforest. And then it starts its growth spurt, and can go on to live for millennia.
Gnangarra via Wikipedia
Firewood banksia don’t just survive in Western Australia’s sandy plains, they thrive, showing off with vibrant, pink-red flower spikes.
Warrigal greens are covered in balloon-like hairs that store salt.
Mason Brock/Wikipedia
This native succulent is a tasty bush food.
The ghost fungus emits an eerie green glow.
Alison Pouliot
Wander in the dark forest and you might spot the radioactive glow of the ghost fungus.
The Conversation
Walking towards this tree, which grows only on a select few mist-shrouded mountainsides in Queensland, can feel like stepping into a prehistoric dinosaur-filled fantasy.
The Conversation
This retiring violet tucked away in the Australian bush holds the key to future generations of medically-engineered plants.
The Conversation/THawkes
Move over Benedict Cumberbatch, there’s another oddly shaped pale figure stealing the limelight.
John Tann/Flickr
Native cherries are everywhere, but we know surprisingly little about them.
Wes Mountain/The Conversation
It takes a eucalyptus tree more than a hundred years to develop hollows suitable to shelter Aussie animals, and just moments to cut it down.
The Conversation
Australia is the world centre for sexual deception in plants, tricking wasps along the way.
The Eucalyptus obliqua as seen in Merthyr Park, Tasmania.
Cowirrie/Flickr, CC BY-SA
One of the great Australian trees – messmate stringybark, Eucalyptus obliqua.
Bill Hails/The Conversarion
Spinifex grass is a (slightly ugly) Aussie battler that keeps on giving.
Rhododendron lochiae, photographed on Bell Peak.
Image by Dan McLeod
European settlers suspected Australia’s high tropical forests hid native rhododendrons.