Zieria vagans, commonly known as Gurgeena stink bush,[2] is a plant in the citrus family Rutaceae and endemic to a small area near Binjour in south-eastern Queensland.
It is an open, straggly shrub with densely hairy branches, three-part leaves and groups of up to fifteen flowers with four creamy-white petals and four stamens.
Zieria vagans is an open, straggly shrub which grows to a height of 2 m (7 ft) and has thin branches covered with soft hairs when young.
[2][3] Zieria vagans was first formally described in 2007 by Marco Duretto and Paul Irwin Forster from a specimen collected in a state forest near Binjour and the description was published in Austrobaileya.
[1] The specific epithet (vagans) is a Latin word meaning "wandering" or "unsettled",[4] referring to some populations of this species growing between woodland and vine thicket.