It is often called the February Daphne as it blooms quite early in the season and is usually one of the first shrubby species to show off.
Repeated shorter intervals between fires promote so-called "type conversion," in which the shrubby species are replaced by grasses, particularly non-native grasses, and other weedy species.
The shrubby species is nonsprouting, erect, 0.4 to 2.0 m, with branchlets that become densely haired in the flowering period.
Cassiope is a genus of 9-12 small shrubby species in the family Ericaceae.
The genus includes both herbaceous and shrubby species.
A few shrubby species from New Zealand are sometimes found in cultivation.
Also, some tall trees but also shrubby and mangrove-like species of Cordaitales seem to have grown in the Carboniferous coal swamps.
The shrubby species is spreading or sprawling in habit, up to 2.5 metres wide and 0.5 to 2.0 m in height.
It is one of a group of small, shrubby species with slender stems and flexible strap-shaped leaves that grow as understory plants in rainforests.
Bush lupin or Bush lupine is a common name applied to a number of shrubby species of lupin: