Acacia harpophylla explained

Acacia harpophylla, commonly known as brigalow, brigalow spearwood or orkor, is an endemic tree of Australia. The Aboriginal Australian group the Gamilaraay peoples know the tree as Barranbaa or Burrii. It is found in central and coastal Queensland to northern New South Wales. It can reach up to tall and forms extensive open-forest communities on clay soils.

Description

The tree is root-suckering and has hard, furrowed and almost black coloured bark. The glabrous or hairy branchlets are angular at extremities. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The coriaceous, sericeous and evergreen phyllodes have a falcate shape with a length of and a width of . They have many closely parallel nerves with three to seven of the nerves being more prominent than the others. When it blooms between July and October, it produces condensed inflorescences in groups of two to eight on racemes, usually appearing as axillary clusters. The spherical flower heads have a diameter of and contain 15 to 35 golden-coloured flowers. After flowering crustaceous and glabrous seed pods form that are subterete and straight to slightly curved. The pods are raised over and constricted between seeds and have a length of up to and a width of with longitudinal nerves. The soft, dull, brown seeds within the pods are arranged longitudinally and have an oblong or broadly elliptic shape. They are flattened but thick with a length of and have a filiform funicle.[1]

Distribution and habitat

Two species, brigalow (A. harpophylla) and gidgee (A. cambagei) form open woodlands on flat and gently undulating terrain on heavy and relatively fertile clay and clay-loam soils primarily in the 300-700mm annual rainfall region of Eastern Australia. These woodlands extend from a northern extreme of 20° S into northern New South Wales. Brigalow and gidgee occur as mixed communities in some regions and are commonly associated with several other woody species, including overstorey species such as Eucalyptus coolabah, E. cambageana, Casuarina cristata, and a range of understorey species.[2] [3] A. tephrina, A. georginae and A. argyrodendron also occupy similar habitats and have similar habits and growth forms, but are less widespread, while a number of other Acacia species also form structurally similar communities.[4]

Brigalow occurs from coastal regions receiving in excess of rainfall per year through to the semiarid rainfall region although it is primarily a semiarid zone species.[3] [4] Gidgee (A. cambagei) replaces brigalow as rainfall drops in western regions and extends from .[5] Gidgee, with a maximum height of approximately, is somewhat smaller than brigalow, which can attain heights of .[6] In the north-western regions black gidgee (A. argyrodendron) replaces brigalow in many areas, while in Central-Western districts boree (A. tephrina) forms woodlands and shrublands, frequently on cracking clay soils and often in association with A. cambagei. Georgina gidgee (A. georginae) woodlands are found in more arid regions in the rainfall belt.[4]

In New South Wales it is found from around Roto in the south to around Hungerford in the west and Willow Tree in the east along the Great Dividing Range. In Queensland it is found as far north as Townsville.[7]

Taxonomy

The species was first formally described by the botanist George Bentham in 1864 as part of the work Flora Australiensis. It was reclassified as Racosperma harpophyllum by Leslie Pedley and subsequently transferred back the genus Acacia in 2001.[8] The type specimen was collected from around Rockhampton.[7] The specific epithet is in reference to the falcate shape of the phyllodes on the tree.[9]

Response to fire

Species associated with these brigalow communities generally have a good capacity for re-sprouting following fire, and brigalow itself sprouts freely from the butt, roots and living stems in response to fire damage. Both gidgee and blackwood, in contrast, have a limited capacity to resprout following fire damage.[3] [4] A notable exception to the fire tolerance of brigalow communities occurs in what are referred to as softwood scrubs, which are dense communities of brigalow and a range of particularly fire-sensitive species.[10] Fire in any brigalow or gidgee woodland would be a rare event under natural circumstances, since pasture is at best sparse in these communities, consisting of Chloris, Setaria (syn. Paspalidium), Dicanthium, Sporobolus and Eragrostis species.[11]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Acacia harpophylla. 9 October 2019. WorldWideWattle. Western Australian Herbarium.
  2. Scanlan, J. C. (1988). Managing tree and shrub populations. Native pastures in Queensland their resources and management. W. H. Burrows, J. C. Scanlan and M. T. Rutherford. Queensland, Queensland Government Press.
  3. Anderson, E. and P. Back (1990). Fire in brigalow lands. Fire in the management of northern Australian pastoral lands. T. C. Grice and S. M. Slatter. St. Lucia, Australia, Tropical Grassland Society of Australia.
  4. Johnson, R. W. and W. H. Burrows (1994). Acacia open forest, woodlands and shrublands. Australian Vegetation. R. H. Groves. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.
  5. Weston, E. J. (1988). The Queensland Environment. Native pastures in Queensland their resources and management. W. H. Burrows, J. C. Scanlan and M. T. Rutherford. Brisbane, Queensland Government Press.
  6. Anderson, E. R. (1993). Plants of Central Queensland. Brisbane, Queensland Government Press.
  7. Web site: F.A.Zich . B.P.M.Hyland . T.Whiffen . R.A.Kerrigan . Bernard Hyland . 2020 . Acacia harpophylla . Australian Tropical Rainforest Plants Edition 8 (RFK8) . . 24 June 2021.
  8. Web site: Acacia harpophylla F.Muell. ex Benth.. 9 October 2019. Atlas of Living Australia. Global Biodiversity Information Facility.
  9. Web site: Acacia harpophylla F.Muell. ex Benth.. PlantNet. 9 October 2019. Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney.
  10. Flannery, T. (1994). The future eaters. Frenchs Forest, Australia., Reed New Holland.
  11. Weston, E. J. (1988). Native Pasture Communities. Native pastures in Queensland their resources and management. W. H. Burrows, J. C. Scanlan and M. T. Rutherford. Brisbane, Department of Primary Industries.