Hakea leucoptera subsp. sericipes is a small tree with cylinder-shaped leaves and clusters of up to forty-five white fragrant flowers. It is found in northwestern New South Wales, Queensland and Western Australia.
Hakea leucoptera subsp. sericipes is a small tree with an open canopy up to high, or may be a denser, multi-stemmed shrub high. It usually has straight, stiff branches and grey bark. The well spaced, long, needle-shaped leaves are a silver-grey, long, in diameter ending in a sharp point long covered in short, white silky hairs at first, but later becoming hairless. The inflorescence is a cluster of 18-45 yellow or creamy-white flowers scented flowers on a stem long and densely covered, with white, short, soft, matted hairs. The perianth is white, smooth and long. The fruit are smooth, egg-shaped, about long, wide ending with a broad beak. Flowering occurs from November to December.[1]
Hakea leucoptera was first formally described in 1810 by Robert Brown and the description was published in Transactions of the Linnean Society of London.[2] [3] In 1996 William Baker described two subspecies of H. leucoptera in the Journal of the Adelaide Botanic Garden, including this subspecies and subspecies leucoptera, and the name is accepted by the Australian Plant Census. This subspecies differs from the autonym (subspecies leucoptera) in having shiny hairs pressed against the pedicels. The subspecies epithet (sericipes) is from the Latin words sericeus meaning "silken" and pes meaning "a foot".[4]
Subspecies sericipes is found usually growing in coarse, heavier soils in New South Wales west of the Great Dividing Range and contiguous plains, either as an individual tree or thickets of underbrush shrubs. Also in southern and central Queensland. In dryer areas of central Western Australia.[4] [5] [6]