Banksia nivea was first collected by
Jacques Labillardière in the vicinity of
Esperance Bay between 15 and 17 December 1792, during a search for the naturalist
Claude Riche, who had become lost on the Australian mainland. Labillardière formally described and figured the species in
Relation du Voyage à la Recherche de la Pérouse, his account of the voyage published in 1800. In 1810
Robert Brown transferred it into a new genus,
Dryandra as
D. nivea. In 1996,
Alex George described two subspecies of
Dryandra nivea: •
Dryandra nivea (Labill.) R.Br. var.
nivea that has a pistil long and leaves wide; that has a pistil long and leaves wide. and
B. nivea (A.S.George) A.R.Mast & K.R.Thiele subsp.
uliginosa, the names accepted by the
Australian Plant Census. A third subspecies (
B. nivea subsp.
Morangup (M.Pieroni 9/42) WA Herbarium) has been named but not yet formally described. ==Distribution and habitat==