Podolepis hieracioides commonly known as long podolepis,[1] is a flowering plant in the family Asteraceae and grows in New South Wales and Victoria. It is a small perennial with yellow flowers.
Podolepis hieracioides is an upright, glabrous or woolly, bristly, sparingly branched perennial to high with a single or several stems. The basal leaves are lance or elliptic-shaped, up to long, stem-clasping, sessile and pointed at the apex. The leaves higher on the stems are narrowly lance-shaped to linear and up to long, rough to smooth, margins flat to rolled under, basal leaves elliptic The flower heads are borne in groupings of 2–6 in a scant elongated cyme, in diameter and long. The bracts are oval-shaped, smooth, middle bracts with thick glandular claws, long, slightly covered by adjoing bracts and the 15-30 florets pale yellow. Flowering occurs from December to April and the fruit is dry, one-seeded, bristly and long.[1] [2]
Podolepis hieracioides was first formally described in 1859 by Ferdinand von Mueller and the description was published in Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae.[3] [4]
Long podolepis grows in soils at lower altitudes or in shallow soils on hills mostly south of the Blue Mountains in New South Wales. In eastern Victoria it grows in subalpine and montane locations in grassland, woodlands and forests.[1] [2]