Persoonia stradbrokensis is a species of flowering plant in the family Proteaceae and is endemic to eastern Australia. It is an erect shrub or tree with hairy young branchlets, elliptic to egg-shaped leaves, and yellow flowers borne in groups of up to twenty on a rachis up to, each flower with a leaf or scale leaf at its base.
Persoonia stradbrokensis is an erect shrub or tree that typically grows to a height of with smooth bark above, rough bark on the lower trunk, and branchlets that are covered with greyish to light brown hairs when young. The leaves are broadly elliptical to egg-shaped, long, wide and hairy when young. The flowers are arranged in groups of up to twenty along a rachis up to long that continues to grow after flowering, each flower on a pedicel long with a leaf or scale leaf at its base. The tepals are yellow and long. Flowering mainly occurs from December to May and the fruit is a drupe.[1] [2]
Persoonia stradbrokensis was first formally described in 1921 by Karel Domin in Bibliotheca Botanica from specimens he collected on Stradbroke Island in 1910.[3] [4]
This geebung grows from coastal heath to forest in near-coastal areas of Australia between Tin Can Bay in south-eastern Queensland and the Hastings River in north-eastern New South Wales.