Olearia adenocarpa has very little known about its general
life cycle due to its low-occurring numbers of individual plants. At 6 months old
Olearia adenocarpa main stem becomes
decumbent. By one year old there are two or three decumbent main branches and few shorter upright branches. At two years old
Olearia adenocarpa have more than 12 decumbent branches at 3–12 cm long, with many other shoots arising. By the age of three years plus,
Olearia adenocarpa is considered mature, having at this stage more than 18 slender branches, however these branches are short lived based on the measurement of the annual
growth rings of the plant that live no more than 20 years. Many old branches are scattered around the base of the plant in various states of decay. The growth depends upon the extent of animal
grazing. Moderately grazed plants produce new shoots regularly. However, severely grazed plants produce very few new shoots. Therefore, as older branches die, they are not replaced. Gradually the plant dies from grazing by
hares,
rabbits,
sheep, or other animals. The
phenology of the
Olearia adenocarpa is also little known due to the recent discovery of this species and the lack of individuals. From mid-December, flower buds begin to appear on the plant at about a 0.1 cm length, by late December this has increased to 0.2 cm. By mid-January the buds have elongated to a length of 0.4 cm.
Flowering occurs around the end of January as the first florets open and the
anthers dehisce. These flowers commonly appear in clusters.
Anther- part of a
stamen that contains
pollen.
Dehisced- stamen/
pod/
seed gape or burst open setting the pollen free. The flowering of the
Olearia adenocarpa is completed by the end of February as pollen is all
dispersed and the dry seeds are covered with fine hairs that characterize them from other species. It is suspected that
seed dispersal happens with the
flood waters of the river washing them downstream, however the hairs signify that it may be seed dispersal through a carrier such as sheep or rabbit. ==Diet and foraging==