Euclid - Online edition

Eucalyptus sp. Cockburn


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Mulyungerie box

Classification

Eucalyptus | Symphyomyrtus | Adnataria | Apicales | Buxeales | Amissae

Nomenclature
Eucalyptus sp. Cockburn (M.I.H.Brooker 12741 & A.V.Slee) Australian National Herbarium (CANB).

This undescribed taxon was referred to as Eucalyptus aff. largiflorens in earlier editions of EUCLID.
Description

Spreading tree to 7 m tall. Forming a lignotuber.
Bark rough over trunk and extending to small branches, grey to dark grey, box-type.
Juvenile growth (coppice or wild seedling to 50 cm tall): stems rounded to square in cross-section; juvenile leaves always petiolate, alternate, linear to narrowly lanceolate, 7–16 cm long, 0.5–1.5 cm wide, greyish green, dull.
Adult leaves alternate, petioles 0.5–1.2 cm long; blade lanceolate, 7–11 cm long, 1–1.5 cm wide, base tapering to petiole, margin entire, apex pointed, concolorous, glossy, mid-green, side-veins acute, reticulation dense, intramarginal vein remote from margin, oil glands scattered, intersectional, or obscure.
Inflorescence terminal compound with some umbels in upper axils, peduncles 0.3–0.6 cm long, buds (?3)7 per umbel, pedicels 0.1–0.2 cm long. Mature buds obovoid to ovoid, 0.2–0.3 cm long, 0.2–0.3 cm wide, scar present (outer operculum shed early), operculum obtusely conical to rounded, stamens inflexed, all fertile or in some plants the outer filaments without anthers or the anthers poorly developed (staminodes), inner filaments with ± cuboid anthers, adnate, basifixed, dehiscing by sub-terminal pores, style long and straight, stigma blunt, locules 4, the placentae each with 4 vertical rows of ovules. Flowers white.
Fruit pedicellate (pedicels 0.1–0.2 cm long), cupular, 0.3–0.5 cm long, 0.2–0.5 cm wide, disc usually descending, valves 4, enclosed or near rim level.
Seeds brown, 0.8–1.5 mm long, flattened-ovoid, dorsal surface shallowly reticulate, hilum ventral.

Cultivated seedlings (measured at node 10): cotyledons reniform; stems rounded to square in cross-section, slightly glaucous or non-glaucous; leaves always shortly petiolate, opposite for 6 or 7 nodes then alternate, linear, (7)9–16 cm long, 0.4–1 cm wide, dull, grey-green (non-glaucous).

Flowering Time

Flowering has been recorded in October and November.

Notes
Eucalyptus sp. Cockburn is a fully rough-barked tree of low stature with large branches bending to the ground and a green crown. It flowers in spring and some trees produce flowers with infertile outer stamens; on others the flowers have all stamens fertile. The seedlings are narrow-leaved, similar to those of typical E. largiflorens. Eucalyptus sp. Cockburn grows with Eragrostis australasica clumps on discrete depessions in the arid zone south of Lake Frome, South Australia.

Eucalyptus sp. Cockburn is best placed in Eucalyptus subgenus Symphyomyrtus section Adnataria (the boxes) because the buds have two opercula, ovules are in four rows, seeds are flattened-ovoid, cotyledons are reniform, and anthers are rigid on the staminal filaments. Within section Adnataria, E. sp. Cockburn is part of a subgroup, series Buxeales, further distinguished by terminal inflorescences and buds that lose the outer operculum early in development. It is a bit different from other members of this group because of its regularly inflexed stamens, outer filaments sometimes without anthers (staminodes) and glossy adult leaves.

The relationship between Eucalyptus sp. Cockburn and the well-known Black Box, E. largiflorens, which occupies floodplain habitat adjacent to streams in the riverine plain areas of South Australia, Victoria, New South Wales and south-eastern Queensland, needs investigating.
Origin of Name
Eucalyptus sp. Cockburn is an unusual glossy green-leaved form of the widespread and well-know black box, E. largiflorens, which is common on the floodplains of inland river systems of southern Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria and less commonly, South Australia. Eucalyptus sp. Cockburn has only recently been collected from a single pure stand north-west of Cockburn, South Australia, on a red-brown clay-loam depression. It was brought to our attention by Norman Hindley, CSIRO Wildlife & Ecology, Canberra.
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