Grevillea mcgillivrayi is a species of flowering plant in the family Proteaceae and is endemic to Queensland in Australia. It is slender tree with linear to strap-like leaves, and cylindrical clusters of white to cream-coloured flowers, the style sometimes turning pink with age.
Grevillea macgillivranyi is a slender tree that typically grows to a height of . The leaves are linear to strap-like, long, wide the edges rolled under, the lower surface silky-hairy and the midvein is prominent. The flowers are arranged in cylindrical clusters, sometimes branched, long, the flowers at the bottom of each cluster opening first. The flowers are white to cream-coloured and glabrous, the style sometimes turning red with age, the pistil long. Flowering occurs from July to September, and the fruit is a lens-shaped follicle about long.[1]
This grevillea was first formally described in 1975 by Donald McGillivray who gave it the name Grevillea coriacea,[2] [3] but that name is a nomen illegitimum because it was already used for a fossil species. In 2014, Ian Mark Turner changed the name to Grevillea mcgillivrayi in Annales Botanici Fennici.[4] [5]
Grevillea mcgillivrayi grows in forest and woodland, often on dry slopes, and is found in north-eastern Queensland from north of Cooktown to Mount Mulligan and Mount Molloy.
This grevillea is listed as of "least concern" under the Queensland Government Nature Conservation Act 1992.[6]