Stylidium laricifolium, commonly known as giant trigger-plant, [2] larch-leaf or tree triggerplant,[3] or is a species of flowering plant in the family Stylidiaceae and is endemic to eastern Australia.
It is a perennial subshrub with many linear leaves crowded along its few stems, the flowers white to pale pink and arranged in a single main panicle and smaller racemes.
[2][4] Stylidium laricifolium was first formally described in 1806 by Louis Claude Richard in Christiaan Hendrik Persoon's book Synopsis plantarum.
[5][6] The specific epithet laricifolium refers to the long, narrow leaves, which resemble the leaf form of plants in the Larix genus.
[7] Giant trigger-plant grows in forest in rocky places from south-east Queensland, along the coast and tablelands of New South Wales to eastern Victoria.