Corymbia abbreviata, also known as scraggy bloodwood,[1] is a species of straggly tree that is native to Western Australia and the Northern Territory. It has rough bark, a crown of stiff leaves arranged in opposite pairs, flower buds usually in crowded groups on the ends of branchlets and urn-shaped fruit.
Corymbia abbreviata is a straggly tree or shrub that typically grows to a height of 2.1to and forms a lignotuber. It has tessellated, flaky, grey-brown over red-brown bark. The branchlets are silvery to green, smooth, glabrous and lack oil glands in the pith. Young plants and coppice regrowth have sessile, stem-clasping, heart-shaped leaves, long, wide and arranged in opposite pairs. The crown has adult leaves that are similar to the juvenile leaves, heart-shaped to broadly lance-shaped, long, wide with the base stem-clasping or lobed. The flower buds are mostly arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle long, each branch usually with seven buds, the buds sessile or on pedicels up to long. Mature buds are oval to pear-shaped, long and wide with a rounded operculum. Flowering occurs between July and January and the flowers are creamy white. The fruit is a smooth, woody, urn-shaped capsule long and wide with a conspicuous neck and the valves enclosed.[2]
Scraggy bloodwood was first formally described in 1934 by William Blakely and Maxwell Jacobs and given the name Eucalyptus abbreviata, in Blakely's book A Key to the Eucalypts.[3] In 1995, Ken Hill and Lawrie Johnson changed the name to Corymbia abbreviata.[4] [5] The specific epithet (abbreviata) is from the Latin word abbreviatus meaning "shortened" referring to the flower heads.
Corymbia abbreviata has a scattered distribution extending from Wyndham and Karunji in the Kimberley region of Western Australia and east as far as Dorisvale and Willeroo in the Northern Territory. The distribution of C. abbreviata coincides with C. ferruginea.[2] It grows in skeletal soils, on stony slopes, ridges and outcrops of sandstone, granite or quartzite.