Toomulla.
With Viscum articulatum on Eucalyptus drepanophylla.
Track northwest from Toomulla Beach Road.
Photo 6 - Cassytha capillaris [upper] and C. filiformis.
Track northwest from Toomulla Beach Road.
Photo 9 - Cassytha filiformis [lower] and C. capillaris.
Off track northwest from Toomulla Beach Road.
Common in this area in Melaleuca viridiflora woodland. Characteristic red stems and petioles.
Track northwest from Toomulla Beach Road.
A juvenile plant that has lost its grip on the world. The narrow leaves can be distinguished from those of Benstonea monticola by the large spines on the underside of the midrib (among other things). B. monticola has very fine spines - maybe 1 mm long max - set very close together.
Leaves are stiff and scabrous, which is normal for seedlings of F. virgata.
https://apps.lucidcentral.org/rainforest/text/entities/ficus_virgata.htm
The two species of Pollia found in Qld can be differentiated when not in flower but the form of the upper edge of the leaf sheath - in P. crispata it is wrinkled, in P. macrophylla it isn't.