Stylidium graminifolium, common name "Narrowleaf triggerplant", can be found in all the sandy heath areas of the Knocklofty Reserve, especially near the Reflecting Pond and south east of the Forest Road carpark. It is a perennial herb with narrow strap leaves in a tuft 5 to 50cm high by 10 to 20cm diameter with a long spike of many white to deep pink spring flowers. These flowers have a clever technique for cross pollination. The long column, a fusion of the stamens and the style, is held down below the petals and when an insect burrows into the flower to sip the nectar, it triggers the column which flips up and over the back of the insect depositing pollen on, and possibly collecting pollen from, the back of the insect to cause pollination. Hence the story book name, "bumble bee bottom basher". In the home garden it prefers moist, well drained & mulched soil in part to full sun and the dead flower stalks should be pruned off. It may be short lived in the home garden, but longer lived in a pot and may even spread from seed shed from the seed pods.