- Banksia solandri
taxobox
name = Stirling Range Banksia
image_caption = "B. solandri", cultivated Colac, Vic.
regnum =Plantae
unranked_divisio =Angiosperms
unranked_classis =Eudicots
ordo =Proteales
familia =Proteaceae
genus = "Banksia "
species = "B. solandri"
binomial = Banksia solandri
binomial_authority = R.Br.|"Banksia solandri", commonly known as Stirling Range Banksia, is a species of large shrub in the
plant genus "Banksia ". It occurs only within theStirling Range in southwestWestern Australia .Description
It is a woody shrub to 4 m (13 ft) high with large, broad serrate leaves and thick finely-furred stems. Flowering is in spring and early summer, the inflorescences a fawn in colour.
Taxonomy
"B. solandri" was first collected by
William Baxter from the vicinity ofKing George Sound , and published by Robert Brown in his 1830 "Supplementum Primum Prodromi Florae Novae Hollandiae ". In 1847 it was recollected from Mondurup in theStirling Ranges by James Drummond. The following year Drummond published the name "Banksia hookeri" for the species: quote|" [A] bout the height of 2,000 feet I found, first making its appearance, a splendid Banksia, with leaves more than nine inches long, and about five wide, irregularly jagged and sinuated like those of an English Oak. To this noble shrub I have given the specific name of Hookeri. From the remains of the flowers, they appear to have been scarlet."cite journal | author = Hooker, William Jackson (quoting Drummond, James | year = 1848 | title = Notice of Mr Drummond's discovery of three remarkable plantsin South-West Australia | journal = Curtis's Botanical Magazine | volume = LXXIV | issue = Companion to the Botanical Magazine | pages = 1–3] In 1856, this name was relegated to a synonym of "Banksia solandri" var. "major", but that variety is no longer maintained, and "B. hookeri" is now considered a synonym of "B. solandri"."Banksi solandri" has always been regarded as most closely related to "
Banksia grandis " in the series Grandes, and more recent molecular studies support this arrangement.Cultivation
"Banksia solandri" is extremely sensitive to dieback, however it is easily grafted onto "
Banksia integrifolia ". The foliage makes for an attractive garden shrub. It will grow with a sunny aspect and well drained soil.References
*The genus Banksia L.f. (Proteaceae)
*cite book|author=George, Alex|year=1999|chapter=Banksia|editor=Wilson, Annette (ed.)|title=Flora of Australia: Volume 17B: Proteaceae 3: Hakea to Dryandra|pages=175–251|publisher=CSIRO Publishing / Australian Biological Resources Study|id=ISBN 0-643-06454-0
*The Banksia AtlasExternal links
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