Grevillea laurifolia
Grevillea laurifolia, commonly known as laurel-leaf grevillea, is a species of flowering plant in the family Proteaceae and is endemic to New South Wales. It is a prostrate, trailing shrub with egg-shaped, heart-shaped or round leaves, and clusters of reddish to deep maroon flowers.
Description
Grevillea laurifolia is a prostrate, trailing shrub that can attain a diameter of. Its leaves are egg-shaped to elliptic, sometimes heart-shaped or round, long and wide on a petiole long. The leaves sometimes have wavy edges, and the lower surface is silky-hairy. The flowers are arranged on one side of a rachis long and are reddish to deep maroon, the style with a green to yellow tip, and the pistil long. Flowering mainly occurs from September to January with a peak in November, and the fruit is a woolly-hairy follicle long.Taxonomy
Grevillea laurifolia was first formally described in 1827 by Kurt Polycarp Joachim Sprengel in Systema Vegetabilium from an unpublished manuscript by Franz Sieber. The specific epithet means having leaves similar to species of Laurus.In 2015, Peter M. Olde described two subspecies of G. laurifolia in the journal Telopea, and the names are accepted by the Australian Plant Census:Grevillea laurifolia subsp. caleyana Olde has leaves with an average blade length to width ratio more than 2.2:1, the pistils long.Grevillea laurifolia Sieber ex Spreng. subsp. laurifolia has leaves with an average blade length to width ratio less than 2.2:1, the pistils long.