Hakea francisiana
Hakea francisiana, commonly called the emu tree, grass-leaf hakea or bottlebrush hakea, is a shrub or tree of the genus Hakea native to Western Australia and South Australia.
Description
The non-lignotuberous shrub or tree with an open habit typically grows to a height of and has a v-shaped canopy and rough bark. The evergreen linear leaves are up to a length of and a width of around. It blooms from July to October and produces pink-red flowers. The flowers appear in large racemes that can be as large as in length. The flowers occur in the leaf axils during winter and spring. The colour of the flowers is red or reddish purple but the type that was once known as H. coriacea is mostly cream flowered with a pink middle. After flowering woody seed pods form that are around in length which hold two winged seeds. The pods will shed the seeds in particular conditions such as following a bushfire. It is very similar to Hakea bucculenta and Hakea multilineata.Taxonomy
The species was first formally described by the botanist Ferdinand von Mueller in 1858 as part of the work Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae. The only synonyms are Hakea grammatophylla, Hakea coriacea, Hakea multilineata, Hakea multilineata var. graminea and Hakea multilineata var. grammatophylla.The specific epithet honours George William Francis, who was the first director of the Adelaide Botanic Garden, from 1857 to 1865.