Petrophile vana is a species of flowering plant in the family Proteaceae and is endemic to inland Western Australia. It is a shrub with needle-shaped, sharply-pointed leaves, and spherical to oval heads of small numbers of hairy, white flowers.
Petrophile vana is a shrub that typically grows to a height of and has hairy young branchlets that become glabrous as they age. The leaves are needle-shaped, long, wide and sharply-pointed. The flowers are arranged in leaf axils in sessile, spherical to oval heads of up to four flowers, the heads long and wide, with about four overlapping, egg-shaped involucral bracts at the base. The flowers are long, white and hairy. Flowering has been observed in September and the fruit is a small nut.[1]
Petrophile vana was first formally described in 2007 by Raymond Jeffrey Cranfield and Terry Desmond Macfarlane in the journal Nuytsia from material collected by Cranfield on Melangata Station in 1987.[2] The specific epithet (vana) means "empty, idle or worthless", but said by the authors to mean "trifling, referring to the non-showy appearance of the plant".[3]
This petrophile is only known from a few locations in the Murchison and Yalgoo biogeographic regions where it grows in shallow, gritty clay soils over laterite, sometimes in heath with Thryptomene species.
Petrophile vana is classified as "Priority One" by the Government of Western Australia Department of Parks and Wildlife, meaning that it is known from only one or a few locations which are potentially at risk.[4]