Long Grass Nature Refuge
Fauna and Flora Detail
WildMan
Wildlife Management System
© Copyright Long Grass Nature Refuge,2011
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Scientific Name
Common Name
Type
Notes
Shrub or tree to 9 m high. Bark smooth, red or green, later dark brown or grey. Branchlets dark brown, black or dark blue, markedly ridged when young, grey- or yellow-puberulous or ±glabrous. Young foliage-tips pale yellow or golden, velvety-pubescent. Leaves coriaceous, dark green; petiole above pulvinus mostly 0.5–1.6 cm long, vertically flattened, with 1 orbicular ±glabrous gland near basal pinnae (rarely this gland or another gland to ½ below basal pinnae); rachis 3.5–8 cm long, bearing prominent jugary glands with large orifices at base of each pair of pinnae, and 1–3 often contiguous ±glabrous interjugary glands between some pairs of pinnae or sometimes absent; pinnae 10–18 pairs, 1–3.5 cm long; pinnules 14–35 (–49) pairs, oblong to narrowly oblong, 1–2 (–3) mm long, 0.5–0.7 (–0.8) mm wide, ±glabrous or sparsely puberulous on margins and often beneath, rounded or subacute apically. Inflorescences in axillary racemes, or terminal or axillary false-panicles. Heads 19–23-flowered, pale yellow. Pods almost straight-sided, 6–14 cm long, 6–9 mm wide, coriaceous, brown, red-brown or black, sparsely puberulous. Occurs in Qld as far N as Durong, common in north-eastern Darling Downs especially in Jandowae–Haden area, E to Toowoomba district. Grows in open forest or woodland, in undulating country, alluvial flats or black soil plains, in brown clay, red sandy loam or red volcanic soils. Flowers Dec.–Mar, and sometimes July–Aug., after rains; fruits Aug.–Nov.
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