Acacia alaticaulis explained

Acacia alaticaulis is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to a restricted area of New South Wales. It is a spindly, slender shrub to small tree with wavy, winged ridges on the branchlets, bipinnate leaves with 7 to 17 pairs of pinnae, flowers arranged in a racemes with 8 to 41 spherical heads of flowers, each with 12 to 16 pale yellow or pale cream-coloured flowers, and curved, more or less flat pods up to long.

Description

Acacia alaticaulis is a spindly, slender shrub to small tree that typically grows to a height of up to and has wavy, ridged branchlets, the ridges up to wide. The leaves are winged with a rhachis, the petiole up to long. The leaves are bipinnate, with up to 10 pairs of pinnae long, each with 7 to 17 pairs of oblong to narrowly oblong pinnules long and wide. The flowers are arranged in a raceme up to long with 8 to 41 spherical heads of flowers. Each head is more or less spherical, in diameter on a peduncle long with 6 to 16 pale yellow to cream-coloured. Flowering occurs from December to May the pod is flat, usually curved, long and wide.[1] [2] [3] [4]

Taxonomy

Acacia alaticaulis was first formally described in 2013 by Phillip Gerhard Kodela and Mary Tindale in the journal Telopea.[5] The specific epithet (alaticaulis) means "winged stem".

Distribution

This species of wattle is endemic to an area in eastern New South Wales where it has a restricted range around Howes Mountain area and around Mount Murwin and the Yengo National Park area where it is commonly situated on hillslopes and ridges among and over sandstone bedrock or outcrops, or where areas of shale meet sandstones. It is found growing in sandy to sandy clay soils as a part of Eucalyptus woodlands or open forest communities as a part of the shrub understorey.[1]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Acacia alaticaulis Kodela & Tindale (ms). 16 February 2020. World Wide Wattle. Western Australian Herbarium.
  2. Web site: Kodela . Phillip G. . Harden . Gwen J. . Acacia alaticaulis . Royal Botanic Garden, Sydney . 29 May 2024.
  3. Web site: Kodela . Phillip G. . Kodela . Phillip G. . Acacia alaticaulis . Flora of Australia. Australian Biological Resources Study, Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water: Canberra . 29 May 2024.
  4. Kodela . Phillip G. . Tindale . Mary D. . Acacia alaticaulis and A. kulnurensis (Fabaceae, Mimosoideae), rare new species from New South Wales, Australia. . Telopea . 2013 . 15 . 120–121 . 29 May 2024.
  5. Web site: Acacia alaticaulis . Australian Plant Name Index . 29 May 2024.