Allocasuarina rupicola, commonly known as shrubby she-oak,[1] is a species of flowering plant in the family Casuarinaceae and is endemic to a restricted area of eastern Australia. It is a slender, dioecious shrub that has branchlets up to long, the leaves reduced to scales in whorls of seven or eight, the fruiting cones long containing winged seeds long.
Allocasuarina rupicola is a slender, dioecious shrub that typically grows to a height of and has smooth bark. Its branchlets are up to long, the leaves reduced to scale-like teeth long, arranged in whorls of seven or eight around the branchlets. The sections of branchlet between the leaf whorls are long, wide. Male flowers are arranged in spikes resembling a string of beads long, with 7.5 to 8 whorls per centimetre (per 0.39 in.), the anthers long. Female cones are on a peduncle long, and mature cones shortly cylindrical, long and in diameter, containing winged seeds long.[2] [3] [4]
Allocasuarina rupicola was first described in 1989 by Lawrie Johnson in Flora of Australia.[5] The specific epithet, (rupicola) means "rock-dweller", referring to its occurrence near rocks.
Shrubby she-oak is found among clefts in granite on the slopes of mountains and near creeks between Wyberba in south-eastern Queensland, and Boonoo Boonoo National Park in north eastern New South Wales.