Acacia binervata
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Acacia binervata, commonly known as two-veined hickory,[1] is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to eastern Australia. It is a bushy shrub or tree, with narrowly egg-shaped to narrowly elliptic phyllodes, creamy yellow flowers arranged in spherical heads in 15 to 25 racemes, and glabrous, thinly crust-like to leathery pods up to Template:Cvt long.
Description
Acacia binervata is bushy shrub that typically reaches Template:Cvt in height or a small tree to Template:Cvt, with grey-black or grey-brown bark and glabrous branchlets. Its phyllodes are glabrous, narrowly egg-shaped to narrowly elliptic Template:Cvt long and Template:Cvt wide with two prominent veins on each side and a gland Template:Cvt above the base of the phyllodes. The flowers are borne in seven to twelve spherical heads on a raceme Template:Cvt long, each head on a pedicel Template:Cvt long with 15 to 25 pale yellow to more or less white flowers. Flowering occurs between August and November and the pods are thinly crust-like to leathery, Template:Cvt long and Template:Cvt wide with oblong to elliptic seeds about Template:Cvt long with a black, thread-like stalk and a club-shaped aril.[1][2][3][4]
Taxonomy
Acacia binervata was first formally described in 1825 by the botanist Augustin Pyramus de Candolle in his Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis.[5][6] The specific epithet (binervata) means 'two-nerved', referring to the 2 main veins on the phyllodes, although there are often thee to five more or less prominent veins.[2]
Distribution
Two-veined hickory is found along the east coast of Australia from south east Queensland through much of New South Wales. It is found from around Narooma in southern New South Wales to around Mittagong in the west[1] up to around the Mount Tambourine area in southern Queensland.[3] It grows on moist sites in sandy or basaltic soils as a part of tall sclerophyll forest or on the margins of rainforest communities.[1]
Use in horticulture
The plant can be grown from seed, though the seed must be scarified prior to planting. It is a hardy and fast growing plant that copes well in damp areas and prefers full sun or part shade positions. It is a dense shade tree or shelter tree or hedge that is frost hardy.[7]
The fungal pathogen Sarcostroma acaciae is found on various species of Acacia including A. binervata in Australia, and causes leaf spots.[8]
See also
References
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