Isopogon tridens, commonly known as the three-toothed coneflower, is a species of flowering plant in the family Proteaceae and is endemic to the southwest of Western Australia. It is a shrub with wedge-shaped leaves with two or three sharply-pointed teeth, and flattened-spherical heads of glabrous creamy white, sometimes purple flowers.
Isopogon tridens is a shrub that typically grows to a height of and has hairy, pale reddish to greyish-brown branchlets. The leaves are wedge-shaped, long, with two or three sharply-pointed lobes or teeth near the tip. The flowers are arranged on the ends of branchlets in sessile, flattened-spherical heads in diameter with hairy, broadly egg-shaped involucral bracts at the base. The flowers are more or less glabrous, creamy white or rarely deep purple, and long. Flowering occurs from June to July and the fruit is a hairy nut, fused with others in a flattened-spherical head about in diameter.[1]
Three-toothed coneflower was first formally described in 1855 by Carl Meissner who gave it the name Isopogon trilobus var. tridens in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany from specimens collected by James Drummond.[2] [3] In 1868, Ferdinand von Mueller changed the name to Isopogon tridens in Fragmenta phytographiae Australiae.[4] [5]
Isopogon tridens usually grows in shrubland or heath and in a small area from near the Arrowsmith River to Eneabba in the Geraldton Sandplains biogeographic region in the south-west of Western Australia.
This isopogon is classified as "not threatened" by the Government of Western Australia Department of Parks and Wildlife.