Hakea preissii, commonly known as the needle tree, needle bush and Christmas hakea,[1] is a shrub or tree of the genus Hakea native to Western Australia. The Noongar name for the plant is Tanjinn.[2]
Hakea preissii is a shrub or tree which typically grows to a height of 2to. It has branchlets that are moderately to densely appressed-pubescent on new growth, quickly glabrescent, and glaucous in their second year. The rigid, simple leaves are rarely divided apically into 2 or 3 segments, 1to in length and 1.5mm2.5mm in width.Inflorescence are axillary with 4–28 yellow-green flowers with persistent pedicels 3.5to long. Smooth grey to black fruit that are obliquely ovate or elliptic, dilated apically and approximately 2cm (01inches) long and 1cm (00inches) wide. It blooms from August to December.[3]
Hakea preissii was first formally described by the botanist Carl Meissner in 1845 from a specimen collected in a forest near York. The description was published in Johann Georg Christian Lehmann's work Plantae Preissianae.[4] [5] [6] The specific epithet (preissii) honours Ludwig Preiss who collected plant specimens in Western Australia between 1838 and 1842.[3]
Needle tree is endemic to an area in the Pilbara, Wheatbelt, Mid West and Goldfields-Esperance regions of Western Australia. It has a scattered distribution and is found as far north as Tom Price and south as Gnowangerup. It is found along the west coast and a little farther east than Kalgoorlie. The plant is found on plains and around the margins of salt marshes growing in sand, loam and sandy-clay soils. It sometimes invades semi-arid pastoral land in Western Australia.[7]
This species is classified as "not threatened" by the Western Australian Government Department of Parks and Wildlife.