Scaevola hookeri

Scaevola hookeri, commonly known as the creeping fan-flower or alpine fan-flower,  is a species of flowering plant in the family Goodeniaceae. It has white or blue flowers with a yellow throat and grows in eastern Australia.

Description
Scaevola hookeri is a prostrate, perennial herb with stems up to 30 cm long that root at the nodes and long, rough, upright to soft, thin, weak hairs. The leaves are 1-5 cm long, and 2 to 15 mm wide, oval to oblong, both surfaces with occasional flattened, soft, short hairs, margins flat, smooth or toothed on a short stalk. The flowers are borne singly in leaf axils, white or blue with a yellowish throat on a peduncle 1-8 mm long, bracteoles oblong to elliptic shaped and 4-6 mm long. The corolla is rough on the outside, with occasional soft, weak hairs on the inside and petals up to 1 mm wide. Flowering occurs usually from November to March and the egg-shaped fruit is about 3 mm long, wrinkled with short, soft, upright hairs.

Taxonomy and naming
Scaevola hookeri was first formally described in 1851 by W.H. de Vriese and the description was published in Nederlandsch Kruidkundig Archief and given the name Merkusia hookeri. The species was transferred to the genus Scaevola in 1856. The specific epithet (hookeri) is named in honour of Joseph Dalton Hooker.

Distribution and habitat
Creeping fan-flower grows in grassland and woodland in high altitude areas in Victoria, New South Wales, Tasmania, and also South Australia where it is listed as "endangered".