Banksia dallanneyi, commonly known as couch honeypot,[2] is a species of prostrate shrub that is endemic to Western Australia.
It only has a short above-ground stem, pinnatipartite or pinnatisect leaves, between thirty and seventy variously coloured flowers and glabrous, egg-shaped fruit.
There are between ten and eighty triangular to oblong lobes on each side of the leaves and the lower surface is covered with woolly white hairs.
[2][3][4] Couch honeypot was first formally described in 1845 by Carl Meissner as Dryandra lindleyana, published in Lehmann's Plantae Preissianae.
[7][8][9] The changed names of the subspecies and varieties are as follows and are accepted at the Australian Plant Census: Banksia dallanneyi grows on flats and rises in a range of soil types between Geraldton and Albany.