Melaleuca incana subsp. incana
Dense spreading shrub 0.5–5 m high; bark fibrous or flaky; branchlets often weeping. Leaves subsessile or shortly petiolate, irregular, alternate or ternate, sometimes opposite, linear-elliptic to linear-ovate, 3.5–25 mm long, 0.5–3.5 mm wide, flat or concave above, greyish-hairy, acute or obtuse, faintly 3-veined, oil glands sometimes distinct. Inflorescence a short spike, 1–4 cm long, 1–2 cm wide; axis densely pubescent, growing on into a leafy shoot. Flowers 1 per bract; bracts ovate, sometimes acuminate; stamens 3–11 per bundle, white to yellow, claw 0.5–2.5 mm long, free part of filaments c. 3–5.5 mm long. Capsules 1.5–4 mm long, 3–6 mm wide, with persistent sepals. Flowers Aug.–Nov.
GipP, OtP, DunT, HSF. Native to south-western Western Australia.
Known in Victoria from a few plants near Anglesea and Inverloch, where sparingly established.
Distinguished from Melaleuca incana subsp. tenella by the relatively larger and generally hairier leaves.