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The bush coconut, or bloodwood apple, is an Australian bush tucker food. It is an insect
gall Galls (from the Latin , 'oak-apple') or ''cecidia'' (from the Greek , anything gushing out) are a kind of swelling growth on the external tissues of plants, fungi, or animals. Plant galls are abnormal outgrowths of plant tissues, similar to be ...
with both plant and animal components: an adult female
scale insect Scale insects are small insects of the order Hemiptera, suborder Sternorrhyncha. Of dramatically variable appearance and extreme sexual dimorphism, they comprise the infraorder Coccomorpha which is considered a more convenient grouping than th ...
and her offspring (of genus ''Cystococcus'') live in a gall induced on a bloodwood eucalypt tree (''
Corymbia ''Corymbia'', commonly known as bloodwoods, is a genus of about one hundred species of tree that, along with ''Eucalyptus'', ''Angophora'' and several smaller groups, are referred to as eucalypts. Until 1990, corymbias were included in the gen ...
''). Bush coconuts can vary from golf ball to tennis ball size. They have a hard and lumpy outer layer. The inner layer is a white
flesh Flesh is any aggregation of soft tissues of an organism. Various multicellular organisms have soft tissues that may be called "flesh". In mammals, including humans, ''flesh'' encompasses muscles, fats and other loose connective tissues, but ...
that contains the female insect and her offspring. There are three known species of ''Cystococcus'' responsible for forming the bush coconut: ''Cystococcus pomiformis'', ''Cystococcus echiniformis'' and ''Cystococcus campanidorsalis''. ''C. pomiformis'' is the most common species. The bush coconut is found in
Western Australia Western Australia (commonly abbreviated as WA) is a state of Australia occupying the western percent of the land area of Australia excluding external territories. It is bounded by the Indian Ocean to the north and west, the Southern Ocean to t ...
, the
Northern Territory The Northern Territory (commonly abbreviated as NT; formally the Northern Territory of Australia) is an Australian territory in the central and central northern regions of Australia. The Northern Territory shares its borders with Western Aust ...
,
Queensland ) , nickname = Sunshine State , image_map = Queensland in Australia.svg , map_caption = Location of Queensland in Australia , subdivision_type = Country , subdivision_name = Australia , established_title = Before federation , establishe ...
and
New South Wales ) , nickname = , image_map = New South Wales in Australia.svg , map_caption = Location of New South Wales in AustraliaCoordinates: , subdivision_type = Country , subdivision_name = Australia , established_title = Before federation , es ...
. The bush coconut is picked from the
host A host is a person responsible for guests at an event or for providing hospitality during it. Host may also refer to: Places * Host, Pennsylvania, a village in Berks County People *Jim Host (born 1937), American businessman * Michel Host ...
tree and cracked open to allow the flesh and scale insects to be eaten. Both have a high protein content and are used as a food source by humans and other animals. The name ‘bush coconut’ is derived from the white flesh of the inner layer, which is similar in appearance to that of a coconut, and the taste of the flesh has been said to have a coconut flavour. The bush coconut has been depicted in Indigenous Australian dreaming and used as inspiration in their artwork.


Discovery

The bush coconut was not mentioned in early documents about Aboriginal insect foods and is considered one of the lesser known
bush tucker Bush tucker, also called bush food, is any food native to Australia and used as sustenance by Indigenous Australians, the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, but it can also describe any native flora or fauna used for culinary or ...
foods utilised by Aborigines. The bush coconut was first described by
Walter Wilson Froggatt Walter Wilson Froggatt (13 June 1858 – 18 March 1937) was an Australian economic entomologist. Early life Froggatt was born in Melbourne, Victoria, the son of George Wilson Froggatt, an English architect, and his wife Caroline, daughter of G ...
in 1893 as ''Brachyscelis pomiformis''. Froggatt collected material from north-western Australia and listed two locations in his original description of the species: Torrens Creek, North Queensland and Barrier Ranges, North Western Australia. Froggatt noted Aborigines ate both the insect and soft flesh of the young gall. The species identified by Froggatt has been revised several times from ''Brachyscelis pomiformis'' to ''Apiomorpha pomiformis, Ascelis pomiformis'' and finally to ''Cystococcus pomiformis.'' Australian entomologist Claude Fuller briefly described another species of insect inducing the bush coconut, ''Cystococcus echiniformis,'' in 1897''.'' Fuller provided a more detailed description along with line drawings of the adult female and its gall in 1899. Some scientists considered ''C. pomiformis'' and ''C. echiniformis'' to be of the genus ''Ascelis''. This was, however, rejected in 1986 by P. J. Gullan and A. F. Cockburn who found that ''Ascelis'' and ''Cystococcus'' are closely-related but distinct genera. They identified what they suspected as a third species in a paper published in 1986. This species was then named and formally described as ''C. campanidorsalis'' in 2015 by Semple et al. Bush coconuts are found on many different species of bloodwood eucalypts (''
Corymbia ''Corymbia'', commonly known as bloodwoods, is a genus of about one hundred species of tree that, along with ''Eucalyptus'', ''Angophora'' and several smaller groups, are referred to as eucalypts. Until 1990, corymbias were included in the gen ...
'') across Australia.


Description

The bush coconut is an insect
gall Galls (from the Latin , 'oak-apple') or ''cecidia'' (from the Greek , anything gushing out) are a kind of swelling growth on the external tissues of plants, fungi, or animals. Plant galls are abnormal outgrowths of plant tissues, similar to be ...
. It is a combination of plant and animal: an adult female
scale insect Scale insects are small insects of the order Hemiptera, suborder Sternorrhyncha. Of dramatically variable appearance and extreme sexual dimorphism, they comprise the infraorder Coccomorpha which is considered a more convenient grouping than th ...
lives in a gall induced on a ''
Corymbia ''Corymbia'', commonly known as bloodwoods, is a genus of about one hundred species of tree that, along with ''Eucalyptus'', ''Angophora'' and several smaller groups, are referred to as eucalypts. Until 1990, corymbias were included in the gen ...
'', the bloodwood eucalypt.


Scale insect

The insect inducing the gall is a
coccid Scale insects are small insects of the order Hemiptera, suborder Sternorrhyncha. Of dramatically variable appearance and extreme sexual dimorphism, they comprise the infraorder Coccomorpha which is considered a more convenient grouping than the ...
in the genus '' Cystococcus''. Three species have been identified: ''C. pomiformis'' and ''C. campanidorsalis'' and ''C. echiniformis.'' The most common species is ''C. pomiformis''. The live coccid is a yellow-green colour.


Female

The female ''Cystococcus'' has no legs, wings or antennae and has been described as ‘grub-like’. Females grow up to 4 cm long. The body is elliptical to sub-spherical in shape and yellow-green in colour. The female scale insect lives within the fleshy interior of the gall. The female’s anus is non-functional. Females are generally soft-bodied although
sclerotisation Sclerotization is a biochemical process that produces the rigid shell of sclerotin that comprises an insect's chitinous exoskeleton. It is prominent in the thicker, armored parts of insects and arachnids, especially in the biting mouthparts and scle ...
produces a hard dorsal 'button' and ventral pore plates. The button is used to plug the gall entrance and it is also the site where mating occurs. The shape of the button distinguishes the species of ''Cystococcus.'' This allows the female to be identified without opening the gall. ''C. pomiformis'' has a convex-shaped button that varies from broad and dome-shaped to pointy and conical, ''C. campanidorsalis'' has a bell-shaped button and ''C. echiniformis'' has a concave-shaped button. Another distinguishing feature of the female scale insects is the pattern of their ventral pore-plates. Pore plates are an olfactory (smell) sense organ found in insects. In ''Cystoccocus'', each pore plate of the adult female is composed of pores that are clustered together and surrounded by a
sclerotised Sclerotin is a component of the cuticle of various Arthropoda, most familiarly insects. It is formed by cross-linking members of particular classes of protein molecules, a biochemical process called sclerotization, a form of tanning in which qui ...
cuticle to form the plate. The pore plates function to produce a white, powdery wax when the insect is living. The function of this wax is unknown. ''C. echiniformis'' has unpatterned clustering of pore plates. The pore plates on ''C. campanidorsalis'' are clearly separated by transverse bands. ''C. pomiformis'' have pore plates that cluster around the vulva and are not clearly separated into transverse bands of sclerotisation. The names of the three species of scale insect inducing bush coconuts reflect observable features. The name ''campanidorsalis'' comes from the bell-shaped button, with ''campana'' meaning bell in Latin, and that it is located dorsal rather than caudal. ''Pomiformis'' means ‘apple-like’ in Latin and refers to the shape and size of the gall ''C. pomiformis'' induces. ''Echiniformis'' is a Latin word meaning shaped like a hedgehog and may refer to the knobbled shape and uneven texture of the gall induced by ''C. echiniformis.''


Male

It is difficult to distinguish different species of adult males within the genus ''Cystococcus.'' Adult male bodies are up to 9.5 mm long and they have an elongated abdomen which is likely an adaptation to enable
mating In biology, mating is the pairing of either opposite- sex or hermaphroditic organisms for the purposes of sexual reproduction. ''Fertilization'' is the fusion of two gametes. ''Copulation'' is the union of the sex organs of two sexually reprod ...
through the gall entrance. Males have purple wings that allow the transport of the immature female offspring out of the gall. Each gall holds between 1700 to 4600 males.


Gall

The bush coconut
gall Galls (from the Latin , 'oak-apple') or ''cecidia'' (from the Greek , anything gushing out) are a kind of swelling growth on the external tissues of plants, fungi, or animals. Plant galls are abnormal outgrowths of plant tissues, similar to be ...
is an abnormal growth of plant tissue that occurs on the leaves, twigs or branches of the host tree. Bush coconut galls have an uneven surface and variable shape but they are generally spherical and have the appearance of a small fruit. The size of the galls varies within and between species, generally ranging from that of a golf ball to a tennis ball. The gall produced by ''C. pomiformis'' has the largest average size''.'' The bush coconut gall has a hard outer layer and a soft, fleshy inside layer that lines the cavity housing the adult female scale insect. The outer layer has surface texture ranging from smooth to lumpy and knobbled. The inner layer is a milky white flesh up to 1 cm in depth. The white flesh and cross-sectional appearance contribute to the name 'bush coconut' because they are similar in appearance to a coconut. The white flesh is also said to have a coconut-like taste. In mature galls, the female insect is attached to the inner wall at a thin attachment point with a small hole to the exterior. The female insect and her offspring feed off the fleshy layer. The appearance of the galls differs slightly between species. ''C. campanidorsalis'' induce galls of diameter 18-28 mm and the gall surface usually has a loose, flaky outer layer that has colour ranging from light to dark brown. ''C. echiniformis'' induces galls with diameter of 16-49 mm. The surface texture varies from smooth to rough and the colour is generally cream-brown but changes to grey or black as the female insect ages and dies. ''C. pomiformis'' usually induce galls that have a uneven and lumpy surface with diameter 13-90 mm. The gall surface is usually pale and creamy-brown in colour when the insect is alive, but darkens and the surface becomes knobbled when the insect dies. The most common host plant is the desert bloodwood, '' Co. terminalis,'' giving the bush coconut the alternative name of ‘bloodwood apple’. The bush coconut gall has two leaf-life projections which may function to camouflage it from animals, including cockatoos and parrots, who may feed on the scale insect. Bush coconuts are usually found in clusters on small, young branches of the host tree. The lifespan of the bush coconut is eighteen to twenty-six weeks.


Ecology

The formation of the bush coconut gall is the result of a
symbiotic relationship Symbiosis (from Greek , , "living together", from , , "together", and , bíōsis, "living") is any type of a close and long-term biological interaction between two different biological organisms, be it mutualistic, commensalistic, or parasit ...
between the host and the female scale insect. The inside flesh of the bush coconut provides protection for the female scale insect, as well as nourishment for her and her offspring. Reproduction occurs when a male coccid inserts its abdomen through a small hole in the gall to mate with the female. Reproduction involves a process known as sexual dichronism, in which the adult female controls the sex allocation of her offspring in order to produce males and females at different times. The adult female gives birth to the male offspring first. The males feed on the flesh of the bush coconut and develop into winged adults. Once the males have almost matured within the gall, female offspring are produced. When the mother dies, the immature wingless female offspring are
transported ''Transported'' is an Australian convict melodrama film directed by W. J. Lincoln. It is considered a lost film. Plot In England, Jessie Grey is about to marry Leonard Lincoln but the evil Harold Hawk tries to force her to marry him and she w ...
out of the maternal gall on their male brothers' elongated abdomens and deposited onto a host tree to start the cycle again. The males then fly off to find mates.


Distribution and habitat

The bush coconut is commonly found in the savannah woodlands and dry sclerophyll forests of northern and central Australia, but populations have been found in Queensland, Western Australia and New South Wales. Bush coconuts are also found in the popular tourist destination,
Alice Springs Desert Park The Alice Springs Desert Park is an environmental education facility and wildlife park in Alice Springs in the Northern Territory of Australia. It is sited on , with a core area of . It is an institutional member of the Zoo and Aquarium Associ ...
in the Northern Territory. ''C. pomiformis'' has been found in north Western Australia, the Northern Territory and Queensland. Host trees include '' Co. cliftoniana'', '' Co. collina'', '' Co. deserticola, Co. dichromophloia, Co. drysdalensis, Co. erythrophloia, Co. hamersleyana, Co. intermedia'' and '' Co. terminalis. C. echiniformis'' is found in north Western Australia, the Northern Territory, west Queensland and far-north-west New South Wales. Host trees include '' Co. chippendalei, Co. clarksoniana, Co. foelscheana, Co. greeniana, Co. lenziana, Co. polycarpa, Co. ptychocarpa and Co. terminalis''. ''C. campanidorsalis'' was first found in central Brisbane in 2015. The only known host tree is '' Co. trachyphloia''.


Cultivation and use

Bush coconuts are often collected during the cold season, usually in April or May, while they still contain the living insect. They are picked from the host tree and then cracked open with a rock or other hard object. The gall may be softened by placing it on hot ashes. The flesh lining of the gall is scraped out and the insect and flesh are consumed. The bush coconut is a food source for
Indigenous Australians Indigenous Australians or Australian First Nations are people with familial heritage from, and membership in, the ethnic groups that lived in Australia before British colonisation. They consist of two distinct groups: the Aboriginal peoples ...
and also for birds and other insects. The insect has a sweet, juicy taste and high water content. The water inside the insect is known as the bush coconut juice. The galls provide shelter for arthropods including tree crickets,
ants Ants are Eusociality, eusocial insects of the Family (biology), family Formicidae and, along with the related wasps and bees, belong to the Taxonomy (biology), order Hymenoptera. Ants evolved from Vespoidea, vespoid wasp ancestors in the Creta ...
and
spiders Spiders (order Araneae) are air-breathing arthropods that have eight legs, chelicerae with fangs generally able to inject venom, and spinnerets that extrude silk. They are the largest order of arachnids and rank seventh in total species di ...
.


Nutrition

Bush coconuts provide a good source of
protein Proteins are large biomolecules and macromolecules that comprise one or more long chains of amino acid residues. Proteins perform a vast array of functions within organisms, including catalysing metabolic reactions, DNA replication, res ...
to the diet. A research study of the nutrition of the bush coconut from ''Cystococcus pomiformis'' living in a gall on the ''Corymbia opaca'' found both male and female insects have high protein content and high gross energy. The range of gross energy was 15.12 to 25.13 MJ/kg for females and 22.56 to 26.87 MJ/kg for males. The lining of the gall, in comparison, has lower gross energy with a range of 14.15 to 16.67 MJ/kg.


Cultural significance

The bush coconut is known to the
Arrernte Arrernte (also spelt Aranda, etc.) is a descriptor related to a group of Aboriginal Australian peoples from Central Australia. It may refer to: * Arrernte (area), land controlled by the Arrernte Council (?) * Arrernte people, Aboriginal Australi ...
of Central Australia, the Gija of Western Australia, and the
Warumungu The Warumungu (or Warramunga) are a group of Aboriginal Australians of the Northern Territory. Today, Warumungu are mainly concentrated in the region of Tennant Creek and Alice Springs. Language Their language is Warumungu, belonging to th ...
and Warlpiri of Northern Territory, each with their own names for the food source.


See also

*
Mulga apple The mulga apple is an Australian bush tucker food, often eaten by the Indigenous Australians of Central Australia. The mulga apple is in fact a combination of plant and animal; the insect gall grows inside the wood of the mulga tree ''( Acaci ...
- Another gall used as bush tucker.


References

{{Taxonbar, from1=Q20735725, from2=Q5001433, from3=Q10465228, from4=Q10465226, from5=Q20735723 Bushfood Australian Aboriginal bushcraft Insects as food Insects of Australia Galls Australian cuisine Indigenous cuisine Eriococcidae