About Correa aemula (Lindl.) F.Muell.
Correa aemula is an erect to spreading shrub that typically grows up to 2.5 metres (8 feet 2 inches) tall, and has branches covered in woolly hairs. Its leaves are papery, broadly heart-shaped, 10โ60 mm (0.39โ2.36 in) long and 5โ35 mm (0.20โ1.38 in) wide, borne on a 4โ6 mm (0.16โ0.24 in) petiole, and covered in star-shaped hairs. Flowers are arranged singly, or sometimes in pairs, in leaf axils or on the ends of short shoots; each flower grows from a hanging (pendent) pedicel 5โ30 mm (0.20โ1.18 in) long. The calyx is cup-shaped, with four lance-shaped lobes 4โ8 mm (0.16โ0.31 in) long. The petals are fused together for most of their length, forming a cylindrical corolla 15โ30 mm (0.59โ1.18 in) long; the corolla is green or greyish green, fading to mauve-purple. Eight stamens extend slightly past the end of the fused petal tube. This species flowers during spring and summer. It grows on sandy or rocky soils in open forests and heathy woodlands. In South Australia, it is found in the Mount Lofty Ranges and on Kangaroo Island; in Victoria, it occurs in the Grampians. Hybrids between this species and Correa decumbens, as well as between this species and Correa reflexa, have been recorded.