Grevillea hookeriana


Grevillea hookeriana, commonly known as red toothbrushes or Hooker's grevillea, is a species of flowering plant in the family Proteaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is a spreading to erect shrub, usually with linear leaves or deeply divided leaves with linear lobes, and toothbrush-shaped groups of red, black or yellowish green flowers, the style maroon to black.

Description

Grevillea hookeriana is a spreading to erect shrub that typically grows to high and up to wide. Its leaves are long, sometimes linear and wide, or deeply divided with up to nine linear lobes wide. The linear leaves or lobes are sharply-pointed, the edges rolled under obscuring most of the lower surface. The flowers are arranged in toothbrush-shaped groups on a rachis long, and are silky- to shaggy-hairy, red, black or yellowish-green the pistil long. The fruit is a hairy follicle long.

Taxonomy

Grevillea hookeriana was first formally described in 1845 by Carl Meissner in Johann Georg Christian Lehmann's Plantae Preissianae from specimens collected by James Drummond near the Swan River. The specific epithet honours William Jackson Hooker, and probably also his son Joseph Dalton Hooker.
In 2000, Robert Owen Makinson described three subspecies of G. hookeriana in the Flora of Australia and the names are accepted by the Australian Plant Census:
  • Grevillea hookeriana subsp. apiciloba Makinson is a spreading shrub tall with narrowly wedge-shaped leaves long with five to ten teeth long and wide, the flowers usually yellowish-green to greyish-fawn with a dull pink or dull reddish style, flowering mainly from July to October;
  • Grevillea hookeriana subsp. digitata Makinson is a spreading shrub up to tall with narrowly wedge-shaped leaves long with five to nine teeth long and wide, the flowers usually yellowish-green to greyish-fawn with a purplish-black or dark maroon style with a green tip, flowering in most months with a peak from August to November;
  • Grevillea hookeriana Meisn. subsp. hookeriana is a spreading shrub tall with linear leaves long and wide, or deeply divided with three to nine linear lobes long and wide, the flowers yellowish-green to greyish-fawn, pink or reddish with a purplish-black, dark maroon, red or yellow style with a green tip, flowering from May to November.
Subspecies hookeriana is variable, and four forms can be distinguished, with frequent intermediates.

Distribution and habitat

Hooker's grevillea is widespread in the south-west of Western Australia, where it grows in heath or shrubland, mainly between Three Springs, Mount Churchman, Coolgardie and Katanning. Subspecies apiciloba is mostly found in the centre of the species' range, subsp. digitata in the north-west of the species' range and subsp. hookeriana in the area between Coorow, Katanning, Newdegate and Merredin.

Conservation status

Grevillea hookeriana is listed as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. All three subspecies are listed as "not threatened" by the Government of Western Australia Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions.
This species has a widespread distribution where it is locally common, and the species' population as a whole is generally stable. Although land clearing for agriculture has reduced much of its distribution, it occurs within multiple protected areas and large areas of its range remain unaffected by land clearing.

Use in horticulture

A cultivar known as G.'' 'Red Hooks' has been in cultivation for many years. It is a hybrid of G. hookeriana and G. tetragonoloba. G. hookeriana'' is comparatively rare in cultivation, and less vigorous than the cultivar. It is best suited to a climate where the summers are dry.
It requires good drainage and prefers a sunny or partially shaded position and has moderate frost resistance. Propagation is from semi-mature cuttings or seed.