cordifolia, commonly known as the pink mountain-correa,[2] is a variety of Correa lawrenceana and is endemic to south-eastern Australia.
It is a shrub with leathery, broadly egg-shaped to heart-shaped leaves, and pink flowers with yellowish tips arranged singly or in groups of two or three in leaf axils.
cordifolia is a shrub that typically grows to a height of 1–5 m (3 ft 3 in – 16 ft 5 in) and has leathery, broadly egg-shaped to heart-shaped leaves 25–105 mm (0.98–4.13 in) long, 20–55 mm (0.79–2.17 in) wide and thinly felty on the lower surface.
[3][4][5] The variety cordifolia was first formally described in 1961 by Paul Wilson in Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia from specimens collected by Ernest Francis Constable on Mount Dromedary in 1953.
[6][7][8] This variety of C. lawrenceana grows in forest, including rainforest, on the coast and nearby tablelands of New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory and south from Lake Conjola and Braidwood, to the far north-eastern corner of Victoria.