Nature conservation

Threatened species

Rupp's Boronia - profile

Indicative distribution


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Key:
known
predicted
The areas shown in pink and/purple are the sub-regions where the species or community is known or predicted to occur. They may not occur thoughout the sub-region but may be restricted to certain areas. ( click here to see geographic restrictions). The information presented in this map is only indicative and may contain errors and omissions.
Scientific name: Boronia ruppii
Conservation status in NSW: Endangered
Commonwealth status: Not listed
Gazetted date: 28 Apr 2000
Profile last updated: 03 Jan 2019

Description

Rupp’s Boronia is a medium-sized shrub 0.4 - 2 m tall. Its leaves are divided into three to seven leaflets, each leaflet 4 - 30 mm long and 1.5 - 12 mm wide. The leaflets are paler underneath than on top and smooth or with a few hairs. When crushed, the leaves have a strong scent. The stems are covered with dense star-shaped hairs. The pale to bright pink flowers are 6 - 10 mm long, can be found in all months, yet blossom primarily during July to November.

Distribution

Restricted to Woodsreef, east of Barraba where it occurs on serpentine geology. In the past, this species was considered to occur more widely in the Hunter Valley, but these records are now recognised as a separate species - Boronia rubiginosa.

Habitat and ecology

  • Rupp’s Boronia grows in dry eucalypt woodland on soils derived from serpentinite rock.
  • Recent extensive surveys indicate over a dozen small subpopulations remain scattered across the local site. Searches for the species in other regional serpentine areas have been unsuccessful to date.
  • Severe herbivory by both macropods and feral goats occurs at some sites and at unpredictable intervals, leading to poor plant health and death. During drought conditions macropods become a more important threat. In contrast, some sites remain largely un-browsed for extended periods.
  • Cost-effective caging of a subsample of plants in each of the sites is being implemented to secure local genetic diversity [whilst cages may not protect plants enough to reach their full growth potential, they facilitate survival, allowing some seed set and recruitment while having lower maintenance costs than a more expensive fence needed to exclude macropods]. However, theft of the cage's mesh limits their use to areas away from public access. One population that has been well-fenced for decades has not prospered as well as hoped, even with complete protection from vertebrate herbivory.

Regional distribution and habitat

Click on a region below to view detailed distribution, habitat and vegetation information.


Threats

Recovery strategies

Activities to assist this species

Information sources

IBRA Bioregion IBRA Subregion Known or predicted Geographic restrictions region
NandewarPeel Known None