Hakea fraseri


Hakea fraseri, the corkwood oak, is a species of shrub or small tree in the family Proteaceae and is endemic to northern New South Wales. It has furrowed bark, pendulous foliage and creamy-white flowers in spring.

Description

Hakea fraseri is a shrub or small tree growing to high with multiple stems, dark grey rough bark and does not form a lignotuber. The branchlets are a whitish colour, covered with flattened, soft hairs, new shoots glossy rusty coloured hairs over glossy white hairs. The leaves are simple, varying length with a weeping habit, long wide, more or less smooth and ending with hook. The inflorescence consists of 25–50 cream-white flowers borne in leaf axils on a stalk long that is covered with reddish-brown, short, matted hairs over whitish flattened hairs. The pedicel long, thickly covered with flattened hairs that extend onto the cream-white perianth when in bud, the pistil long. The fruit is narrowly egg-shaped, long, wide and a long obscure beak. Flowering occurs in spring.

Taxonomy and naming

This species was first formally described in 1830 by Robert Brown and the description was published in Supplementum primum prodromi florae Novae Hollandiae. The specific epithet honours Charles Fraser the first colonial botanist and Superintendent of the New South Wales botanic gardens.

Distribution and habitat

Corkwood oak is a rare species in New South Wales confined to the New England Tablelands below Wollomombi, Dangar, Tia and Apsley Falls on steep slopes and vertical rock situations in gorges.