Plants in this section are usually bushy shrubs, sometimes cauliflower-like, with greyish leaves and fluffy or woolly pink to red, sometimes white flowers.
The sepals have intricately branched lobes and hairy appendages and the stamens and staminodes are joined in a ring structure.
[1] When Alex George reviewed the genus in 1991 he formally described this section, publishing the description in the journal Nuytsia.
[2][3] The name Intricata is from the Latin word intricatus meaning "entangled" or "complicated"[4] referring to the intricately divided sepals.
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