Allocasuarina trichodon is a species of flowering plant in the family Casuarinaceae and is endemic to areas along the south coast of Western Australia. It is a dioecious, rarely a monoecious shrub that has branchlets up to long, the leaves reduced to scales in whorls of eight to ten, and the fruiting cones long containing winged seeds long.
Allocasuarina trichodon is dioecious, rarely a monoecious shrub that typically grows to a height of . Its branchlets are more or less erect and up to long, the leaves reduced to spreading teeth long, arranged in whorls of eight to ten around the branchlets. The sections of branchlet between the leaf whorls are long, wide. Male flowers are arranged in spikes long, with about 8 whorls per centimetre (per 0.39 in.), the anthers long. Female cones are sessile, the mature cones cylindrical to barrel-shaped, long and in diameter, containing winged seeds long.[1]
This sheoak was first formally described in 1845 by Friedrich Anton Wilhelm Miquel who gave it the name Casuarina trichodon in Lehmann's Plantae Preissianae.[2] [3] In 1982, Lawrie Johnson transferred the species to Allocasuarina as A. trichodon in the Journal of the Adelaide Botanic Gardens.[4] [5] The specific epithet (trichodon) means "hair-like tooth", referring to the leaves.[6]
Allocasuarina trichodon grows in tall heath, often in rocky skeletal soils on granitic hillsides from Albany to east of Esperance and in the Stirling Range National Park in the Esperance Plains, Jarrah Forest and Warren bioregions of southern Western Australia.