Grevillea tripartita
Grevillea tripartita is species of flowering plant in the family Proteaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is an erect, prickly shrub with divided leaves with 3 lobes, and clusters of red and cream-coloured or reddish-orange and yellow flowers.
Description
Grevillea tripartita is usually an erect shrub, rarely low-lying, that typically grows to a height of. Its leaves are long and up to wide, usually deeply divided with 3 triangular to more or less linear lobes long and wide. Sometimes the leaves are elliptic or narrowly elliptic with 3 lobes long and wide on the end. The edges of the leaves are turned down to rolled under without concealing the silky- to shaggy-hairy lower surface. The flowers are arranged in loose clusters of 2 to 6 on the ends of branches or in upper leaf axils on a rachis long, the flowers nearer the end of the rachis flowering first. The flowers are red and cream-coloured or reddish-orange and yellow, depending on subspecies, and the pistil is long. Flowering time varies with subspecies, and the fruit is a follicle long with a conspicuous ridge.Taxonomy
Grevillea tripartita was first formally described in 1856 by Carl Meissner in de Candolle's Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis from specimens collected by James Drummond in the Swan River Colony.The specific epithet means "divided into three parts", referring to the leaves.
In 2000, Robert Makinson described two subspecies of G. tripartita in Flora of Australia, and the names are accepted by the Australian Plant Census:
- Grevillea tripartita subsp. macrostylis Makinson, is a spreading shrub with triangular teeth or lobes, the flowers reddish to orange and yellow to cream-coloured flowers mainly from August to December.
- Grevillea tripartita Meisn. subsp. tripartita is a more or less erect shrub with deeply divided, spreading, linear lobes, the flowers orange-red and yellow flowers in most months, with a peak from August to November.