Banksia bella, commonly known as the Wongan dryandra, is a species of dense shrub that is endemic to a restricted area of Western Australia. It has narrow, deeply serrated leaves covered with white hairs on the lower surface, heads of yellow flowers and few follicles in the fruiting head.
Banksia bella is a dense, sprawling shrub that typically grows to a height of but does not form a lignotuber. Its stems are hairy at first but become glabrous as they age. The leaves are crowded on side branches, linear in shape, long, wide in outline, covered with white hairs on the lower surface and pinnatisect with about 35 triangular lobes about long on each side. The flowers are arranged in sessile heads of between thirty and fifty, each flower yellowish with a perianth about long. Flowering occurs in October and the fruit is a more or less spherical or broadly egg-shaped follicle long. There are usually only up to two follices in each head.[1]
The Wongan dryandra was first formally described in 1856 by Carl Meissner who gave it the name Dryandra pulchella in the journal Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis.[2] [3] In 2007 Austin Mast and Kevin Thiele transferred all the dryandras to the genus Banksia but as there was already a plant named Banksia pulchella (teasel banksia), Mast and Thiele chose the specific epithet "bella".[4] Pulchella is from a Latin word meaning "beautiful little" and bella is from a Latin word meaning "beautiful".[5] [6]
The Wongan dryandra is only found near Wongan Hills where it grows in tall shrubland and low woodland.