Zeylanidium olivaceum (Podostemaceae-Podostemoideae) is the only crustose-rooted species of the genus that still develops prominent primary shoots from the seedling in addition to the secondary (root-borne) shoots forming the clonal plant body. The primary shoots are articulated into an up to 8.5 cm long and 4 mm thick stalk (hypocotyl) and a copiously foliated paint-brush-like shoot which is sympodially branched in the form of a helicoid cyme. The helicoid branching pattern indicates a transversal prophyll position, typical of the dicotyledons, but replaced in most other Podostemoideae by a median prophyll position. The short stems within the leafy “head” do not separate, but are fused to a dense aggregate (coenosome). Branches are mainly vegetative with a rosette of about 20 elongate subulate leaves. The primary shoots branch in the vegetative stage and thus differ from other Podostemoideae where ramification is confined to the floriferous shoots. The leaves adhere together at the base, forming an apical furrow-like hollow surrounding the shoot tip. The tiny shoot apex is one-layered, radially symmetrical, and develops leaf primordia in a decussate pattern. The erect primary shoots thus differ from the distichously foliated plagiotropic secondary shoots by the decussate phyllotaxis, and by the presence of more than 20 leaves on a shoot as compared to the about six leaves on the vegetative and floriferous secondary shoots. The features observed in the primary shoots are interpreted as primitive as compared to those of the secondary shoots. Z. olivaceum is thus characterised by heterobathmy, i.e., the occurrence of plesiomorphic (primary shoots) and apomorphic features (secondary shoots). The primary shoots exhibit primitive features that apparently have been lost in secondary and primary shoots of most other members of subfamily Podostemoideae.