Private property. No public access without permission. Growing along the edge of our large wetland. ID of the plant please so I can add it to the related moth sighting: https://canberra.naturemapr.org/Community/Sighting/3876255
My guess is that this is a species of Epilobium, based on: habitat, teeth on leaf, attachment of leaf to stem, and that plants in this genus are one of the food plants for Phalaenoides moths. But as Betty says to take it to species you will need it in flower and may even need seeds, see the PlantNET key: http://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=gn&name=Epilobium
Thanks so much for your help. I've updated the sighting with two more photos showing emerging flowers. I suspect it is Epilobium ciliatum based on the flower, red stems and long stalks. Happy to collect some seed later down the track. If it is an exotic I am reluctant to remove as it is clearly supporting our local native insects/birds. It doesn't seem to be too weedy and naturalised in this location. How would it spread? Thoughts?
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