Grevillea leptobotrys
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Wikipedia links: Angiosperms > Eudicots >Proteales > Proteaceae> Grevillea leptobotrys
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Common name: Tangled grevillea
Conservation status: Not threatened (WA)
Etymology:
The genus was named in honour of Charles Francis Greville, an 18th-century patron of botany and co-founder of the Royal Horticultural Society
The specific epithet (leptobotrys) means "a slender bunch of grapes"
Flowers:
The flowers are arranged on the ends of branches
Sometimes branched clusters on a rachis 30–50 mm long
Pale to deep lilac-pink
The pistil 4–6 mm long
Flowering mainly occurs from October to December, but flowers are present in most months
Fruit:
Oval to club-shaped
Red follicle 9–14 mm long
Leaves:
The leaves are variably-shaped, 30–290 mm long
Sometimes simple and toothed, otherwise divided with seven to fifteen lobes; sometimes further divided
End lobes triangular to egg-shaped, oblong or more or less linear, 2–35 mm long and 1–5 mm) wide
Stem & branches:
Its branchlets sometimes silky- or woolly-hairy
Roots:
x
Habit:
A prostrate shrub that typically grows to a height of 10–40 cm
Habitat:
Woodland and shrubby forest
Distribution:
Endemic to the southwest of WA
Between Cranbrook, Brookton, North Bannister and Shannon in the Avon Wheatbelt, Jarrah Forest and Swan Coastal Plain bioregions
Additional notes:
Taxonomy
Grevillea leptobotrys was first formally described in 1848 by Carl Meissner in Johann Georg Christian Lehmann's Plantae Preissianae
Specimens collected by James Drummond in the Swan River Colony