Hakea verrucosa
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Wikipedia links: Angiosperms > Eudicots > Proteales > Proteaceae > Hakea verrucosa
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Common name: N
Conservation status: Not threatened
Hakea verrucosa is classified as "not threatened" by the WA Government, Department of Parks and Wildlife
Etymology:
Named from the Latin verrucosus - warty, referring to the seed surface
Flowers:
It has large white, deep pink or red pendulous flowers
The pendant inflorescence consists of 7-14 white, pink to red flowers in a showy profusion in axillary clusters, or on old wood
Each inflorescence is held on a stalk about 3–16 mm long
The pedicel 2–5.4 mm long, the perianth 6–9 mm long, initially a cream-white and aging to pink and the pistil 21–25 mm long
Flowering occurs between May and August and the fruit are obliquely egg-shaped 2.2–3.1 cm long and 1.2–1.4 cm wide with blister-like protuberances, tapering to two horns 2.5–5 mm long
Fruit:
x
Leaves:
Stiff needle-shaped leaves
The green terete leaves are about 2–6.3 cm long and 1–1.5 mm wide, ending in a sharp point 1–2 mm long
The leaves are smooth and have a tendency to point in one direction from the branchlet
Stem & branches:
The branchlets are covered mostly in densely matted, short, rusty hairs
Roots:
x
Habit:
It is a spreading prickly shrub growing to 0.8–2.6 m high and does not form a lignotuber
Dense prickly growth habit
Habitat:
Hakea verrucosa grows in heath and low woodland on sandy-loam, near creeks, clay and gravel
Distribution:
Endemic to south-west WA
Ranging from Jerramungup along the coast to Esperance
Additional notes:
Taxonomy and naming
The species was first formally described in 1865 by Victorian Government Botanist Ferdinand von Mueller
Published in the fifth volume of his Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae