Grevillea kennedyana
Grevillea kennedyana, also known as flame spider-flower, is a species of flowering plant in the family Proteaceae and is endemic to a restricted area of inland eastern Australia. It is an erect shrub with many branches, usually linear leaves and erect clusters of rich red flowers.
Description
Grevillea kennedyana is an erect or sprawling, many-branched shrub that typically grows to high and wide. Populations often consist of a close grouping of 4 to 8 individuals that have intertwining branches, creating a combined canopy of. Individual plants have downy branches with silvery grey, linear or rarely lance-shaped leaves long and wide. The leaves are sharply-pointed and the edges are rolled under, concealing most of the lower surface. The flowers are rich red, sometimes orange-red or pink, arranged in erect groups long on the ends of branches with eight to twenty flowers on a rachis long. The flowers are glabrous to silky-hairy on the outside and softly- or shaggy-hairy inside, the pistil long. Flowering mainly occurs from July to November, and the fruit is a wrinkly follicle long, containing a winged seed long.Taxonomy
Grevillea kennedyana was first formally described in 1888 by Ferdinand von Mueller in Transactions and Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria from material collected by William Baeuerlen "between rocks on Grey's Ranges". The specific epithet honours "Mrs. M. B. Kennedy, of Wonnaminta".This grevillea is not closely related to any of Australia's others of the genus, but it does have phylogenetic resemblance to others that are found within semi-arid and temperate arid regions of south western Australia, such as G. decipiens, G. sparsiflora, and G. acuaria. Grevillea kennedyana is not well adapted to growing in deep sandy soils and as a result, the species is considered to be a relict species that has been effected by the expansions of the arid interior of Australia.
Distribution and habitat
Grevillea kennedyana has a restricted distribution in the northwest corner of New South Wales and the southwest corner of Queensland. The altitude range is and plants grows on slopes between 10˚ and 75˚. The area is arid and receives variable and unreliable rainfall. Plants can sometimes be found in dry and rocky watercourses, but mostly grow in clusters on rocky jump-ups and colluvial slopes of rocky mesas with weathered silcrete rocks and loamy soils. The most dense populations of this species are found on the lower slopes that have high water retention. As of 2000, the plant was found in six geographic locations. Ninety per cent of the populations are found in the Sturt National Park and are highly fragmented with a natural range of less thanThe plant communities that are found with G. kennedyana include species such as spiny fan-flower, whitewood, Acacia and Eremophila species, and occasionally black oak. A low ground cover of chenopods is often present.
Ecology
This species is capable of recruitment by rhizomes, making the current individuals clones. However, the plant has also been observed to resprout from adventitious buds from the base of the stems and seeds. New growth can be stimulated by physical damage to the plant.Flowering is seen to occur 2–4 months after a major rainfall event, however during dry seasons flowering is irregular. The necessary amounts of rainfall required for flowering are not known. Fruit is believed to mature 6–8 weeks after fertilisation has occurred. The pollinators are not known, but they are believed to be birds. The seeds are then dispersed soon afterwards, however the dispersal mechanisms are still not fully understood, but it is believed to be aided by the wings that are found on the seeds.
The period of seed dormancy is another unknown factor which needs to be investigated. Depending on its similarity to other Grevillea species it is possibly that it can remain dormant for up to four years. Any recruitment that does occur via seed is believed to be event driven, relying on the combination of above average rainfall and the appropriate temperature. Seedlings that are becoming established in the summer months may be greatly affected by high temperatures and the absence of soil moisture.