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Grevillea montana

Grevillea montana – A spreading shrub to 0.5 to 1.5 m high from the southern Hunter Region of New South Wales; from Denman to Kurri Kurri, growing in open forests on sandy soils.

Grevillea patulifolia

Grevillea patulifolia – An erect to sprawling shrub to 2.5 m high, which can sucker from rhizomes. It is naturally found on the NSW coast, primarily south from Heathcote to Ulladulla with a few records inland to the adjacent tablelands, extending south into Victoria where it is listed as rare.

Grevillea ramosissima subsp. ramosissima

Grevillea ramosissima subsp. ramosissima – A spreading shrub, to 3 m high. This subspecies is found naturally only in NSW, mainly on the tablelands and western slopes, south from Glen Innes and Inverell districts, to the Blue Mountains and the A.C.T, south to virtually the Victorian border. 

Grevillea raybrownii

Grevillea raybrownii – A shrub to 1.5 m high that has a restricted distribution in the Greater Sydney Area, between Dapto, Robertson and Berrima in N.S.W (with possible occurrences in Bungonia). It grows in sandy, gravelly loams in dry sclerophyll forest, mostly on ridge tops and occasionally on slopes.

Grevillea linearifolia

Grevillea linearifolia – Is an upright spreading shrub up to about 2 to 3 m high. It is found naturally, primarily in the Greater Sydney Basin, from Gosford and Putty area to the Parramatta River and Port Jackson, then with disjunct populations near Nowra and Ulladulla as well as Lawson in the Blue Mountains.

Grevillea sphacelata

Grevillea sphacelata – A shrub to 2.5 m high. It is found naturally, primarily in the Sydney basin, occurring from north of Sydney to north of Kiama and to Mittagong area.

Grevillea sericea

Grevillea sericea – A shrub to 2 metres high with about a 1 metre spread. An endemic to NSW, it grows naturally from southern Sydney to near Newcastle; west to the Blue Mountains area and north-west to the Goulburn River catchment in the Hunter Valley.

Grevillea rosmarinifolia

Grevillea rosmarinifolia – A shrub usually to 2 m tall. It is a native of NSW and Victoria, found in the central and southern areas of NSW, south from around Oberon, through the tablelands, slopes and the east of the western plains (as well as the south coast) into Victoria.

Grevillea rivularis

Grevillea rivularis – A shrub to 2.5 m high. It is confined to the Carrington Falls area on the upper Kangaroo River, west of Kiama, within Budderoo National Park in N.S.W.

Grevillea macleayana

Grevillea macleayana – A spreading to erect shrub to 4 m high. It occurs solely on the N.S.W. South Coast, mainly around Jervis Bay and extending patchily west of Nowra to Bundanoon and south to Ulladulla, with a remote location further south in Deua National Park.

Grevillea phylicoides

Grevillea phylicoides – This species is not readily known in cultivation, mainly due to the fact that so many other grevillea species and cultivars are grown.

Grevillea juniperina

Grevillea juniperina – A prickly-leaved and highly variable shrub, growing to 3 m high, typically on clay-based or alluvial soils in dry sclerophyll woodland. It is common on creeks and moist areas but can also be seen colonising roadsides in some places.

Grevillea obtusiflora

Grevillea obtusiflora – A spreading shrub, to 2 m high, sometimes suckering from roots (producing ramets or clones). Grows in sandy loam soils in open lower midstorey in dry sclerophyll forest in the Kandos and Capertee Valley areas of NSW (Central Tablelands)

Grevillea oleoides

Grevillea oleoides – A shrub to 3 m high, growing in moister areas of dry sclerophyll woodland or heath, often beside creeks or in swampy ground, on sandstone and sandy soils.

Grevillea mucronulata

Grevillea mucronulata is a spreading to erect shrub which usually grows up to 2 m high. Its primary natural range is from the upper Hunter Region around Denman and Singleton, west to Rylstone…

Rhododendron viriosum (syn. Rhododendron lochiae)

For many years, Rhododendron lochiae was considered to be Australia’s only native Rhododendron, only found growing within the Bellendron Kerr Range inland from Cairns. However, recent investigations have indicated that two distinct species exist: Rhododendron lochiae and Rhododendron viriosum.

Pittosporum multiflorum

Pittosporum multiflorum – A stiff, wiry shrub up to 3 m high, with thorny branches.  It is found in or near rainforest or wet sclerophyll forest, typically on enriched soils (shale and volcanic loams).Can also thrive in cleared rainforest areas. It grows north of Bega in NSW, extending mainly along the coast, into Queensland to around the Sunshine Coast.

Banksia oblongifolia

Banksia oblongifolia – A shrub to 3 m tall with a lignotuber. It is found usually on sandstone and sandy soils, as well as sandy alluvium.

Banksia penicillata

Banksia penicillata – A shrub, usually to about 4 m tall without a lignotuber. It is found in restricted areas in the central coast, tablelands and central western slopes, mainly in the Blue Mountains (Wollemi National Park), on sandstone cliffs or steep rocky slopes.

Banksia collina

Banksia collina – Typically, a multi-stemmed shrub to 3 m tall, bearing a lignotuber.

Banksia neoanglica

Banksia neoanglica – Typically, a multi-stemmed shrub to 3 m tall, but can sometimes be found as a small tree to 7 m tall, bearing a lignotuber.

Banksia plagiocarpa

Banksia plagiocarpa – A shrub, usually to about 5 m tall. It is restricted to Hinchinbrook Island in northern Queensland and the adjoining mainland close to the coast (between Townsville and Cairns).

Banksia spinulosa

Banksia spinulosa grows mostly on the central and south coast subdivisions of NSW, extending into the tablelands where records are fewer, also extending up the north coast into Queensland, with disjunct populations up to about Townsville.

Banksia praemorsa

Banksia praemorsa – A shrub, usually to about 4 m tall. It is restricted to south-west WA on the south coast between near Albany and extending about 100 km east. It grows on sand in sclerophylls shrubland and woodland.

Syzygium wilsonii

Syzygium wilsonii is a shrub to 3 m tall and slow growing. It grows in far northern Queensland in rainforests, from Ingham to Cooktown.

Acacia denticulosa

Acacia denticulosa is an open, somewhat sparse shrub to 4 m high, it is endemic to Western Australia and it listed as threatened with extinction.

Acacia aphylla

Acacia aphylla is a wiry, narrow spiky shrub, to 3 m high, it is endemic to Western Australia and it listed as threatened with extinction.

Acacia juncifolia

Acacia juncifolia is an erect to spreading shrub to 3 m high, in dry sclerophyll forests and woodlands, in sandy soils. It grows in north-eastern NSW, on the central and north-western slopes as well as the central and north coast subdivisions, extending into QLD.

Acacia ptychoclada

Acacia ptychoclada is a shrub growing to 2.5 m high and nearly as wide, with a very limited distribution from near Woodford to Mt Victoria, in the Blue Mountains of NSW.

Acacia longifolia subsp. sophorae

Acacia longifolia subsp. sophorae – generally a prostrate shrub when growing on exposed coastal dunes, but may grow as a large shrub to 2-3 metres in height (sometimes taller) in more sheltered locations such as near-coastal forests.

Acacia genistifolia

Acacia genistifolia s a prickly shrub growing to 3 m high, in dry sclerophyll forests and woodlands in NSW, Victoria, and Tasmania. Usually found on gravel and shaley soils. It grows south from about Bathurst, west to Grenfell and Griffith, also recorded in the Warramgamba Catchment

Acacia glaucoptera

Acacia glaucoptera is a prostrate to semi-prostrate shrub from Western Australia, it grows naturally north of Albany and east to Esperance, on a latitude south of Perth.

Acacia cremiflora

Acacia cremiflora is a small to large shrub, often about 1 metre in height but sometimes to 2 metres. It is found on the central western slopes and tablelands of NSW with some records in the Central Coast subdivision around Yerranderie. Grows in gravelly clay or sandy loam soils, in woodlands and woodland-grassland.

Acacia leucolobia

Acacia leucolobia is an open shrub to 3 m high, naturally found in NSW from near Coolah in the north, south to Katoomba and Burrinjuck, in heath and dry sclerophyll forests. It is mainly found on the central tablelands and central western slopes. Possibly occurs in the Bowral to Wingello area in the southern highlands.

Acacia meiantha

Acacia meiantha is an endangered plant, consisting of severely fragmented populations that are in decline and are found in three disjunct populations, all within the NSW Central Tablelands within 100 km of each other, growing in dry sclerophyll forest or woodland, in sandy to clayey soils. It grows in Mullions Range (north of Orange) and Clarence (east of Lithgow).