Eucalyptus Gomphocephala
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''Eucalyptus gomphocephala'', known as tuart, is a species of tree, one of the six forest giants of
Southwest Australia Southwest Australia is a biogeographic region in Western Australia. It includes the Mediterranean-climate area of southwestern Australia, which is home to a diverse and distinctive flora and fauna. The region is also known as the Southwest Aus ...
. Tuart forest was common on the Swan coastal plain, until the valuable trees were felled for export and displaced by the urban development around Perth, Western Australia. The wood is dense, hard, water resistant and resists splintering, and found many uses when it was available. Remnants of tuart forest occur in state reserves and parks, the tree has occasionally been introduced to other regions of Australia and overseas. Remaining trees are vulnerable to phytophthora
dieback Dieback may refer to a number of plant problems and diseases including: * Forest dieback caused by acid rain, heavy metal pollution, or imported pathogens * The death of regions of a plant or similar organism caused by physical damage, such as from ...
, an often fatal disorder, including a previously unknown species discovered during analysis of dead specimens.


Description

The tree is native to the southwest of Western Australia and typically grows to a height of . The tallest known living Tuart is 47m tall and located in the Tuart Forest NP near Ludlow. The largest Tuart tree has a wood volume of 108m³. Taller trees are often found at the southern end of the trees range while smaller trees are found at the northern end. The crown of the tree can spread up to a width of . The habit of tuart is a tall single stemmed tree, but may form a low and multi-stemmed tree at the edge of stands in response to salinity and winds. Tuart has box-like rough bark over the length of the trunk and branches. The bark is fibrous and grey in colour and breaks into smaller flaky pieces. Leaves are stalked, alternate, with a lanceolate or falcate shape. The leaves are slightly discolorous to concolorous, glossy, light green and thin. The leaf blade is in length and often curved. White flowers appear in mid summer to mid autumn between January to April. Buds that are almost stalkless appear as clusters in groups of seven. The buds have swollen caps, said to resemble a small ice cream cone, that are around long. The flowers are formed in tight clusters made up of around seven flowers. These later form into fruits with a mushroom shape containing small red-brown seeds. The fruits are narrow and in length with a broad rim.


Taxonomy and naming

The species was formally described by the
botanist Botany, also called , plant biology or phytology, is the science of plant life and a branch of biology. A botanist, plant scientist or phytologist is a scientist who specialises in this field. The term "botany" comes from the Ancient Greek wo ...
Augustin Pyramus de Candolle, published in the third volume of his '' Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis'' (1828). The
type Type may refer to: Science and technology Computing * Typing, producing text via a keyboard, typewriter, etc. * Data type, collection of values used for computations. * File type * TYPE (DOS command), a command to display contents of a file. * Ty ...
collection was assembled by the botanist
Jean-Baptiste Leschenault Jean-Baptiste Louis Claude Théodore Leschenault de La Tour (13 November 1773 – 14 March 1826) was a French botanist and ornithologist. Born at the family seat (since 1718), Le Villard, near Chalon-sur-Saône, Leschenault de la Tour arrived in ...
at the Vasse River during 1802, while serving with the
Baudin expedition The Baudin expedition of 1800 to 1803 was a French expedition to map the coast of New Holland (now Australia). Nicolas Baudin was selected as leader in October 1800. The expedition started with two ships, '' Géographe'', captained by Baudin, and ...
. In 1939, William Blakely and Henry Steedman described two varieties of this species in ''Contributions from the New South Wales National Herbarium'' but the named are listed as Synonym (taxonomy), synonyms by the Australian Plant Census. The epithet ''gomphocephala'' is derived from ''gomphos'', meaning 'club' and ''kephale'', 'head',Ruthrof, K. X., Yates, C. J., & Loneragan, W. A. (2002). The biology of tuart. In: B. J. Keighhery, V. M. Longman, & W. A. Nedlands (Eds.), ''Tuart (Eucalyptus gomphocephala) and Tuart Communities'' (pp. 108–122). A Perth Branch Wildflower Society of Western Australia. describing the rounded and overlapping shape of the Operculum (botany), operculum. The species is allied as a monophyletic arrangement within the most diverse eucalypt subgenus, Eucalyptus subgen. Symphyomyrtus, ''Eucalyptus'' subgen. ''Symphyomyrtus'', recognised as the sole species of it section. The Noongar peoples named the tree tuart or tooart, moorun or mouarn.


Distribution

The distribution range of the species is a narrow coastal corridor within the Swan Coastal Plain, extending inland , a continuous strip south from Yanchep, Western Australia, Yanchep to Busselton, Western Australia, Busselton. This area has been intensively cleared for changes in agricultural practices, then urbanisation, so that the numbers of tuart trees and forest was greatly reduced after the establishment of the Swan River Colony. Outlying patches of the tree are found to the north of Yanchep as far as Geraldton, Western Australia, Geraldton and further inland where rivers intersect the range. The species has become naturalised in other places. It grows in sandy well drained soils, often over limestone, in sunny positions. The trees are part of coastal shrubland ecosystems in areas of deep sand. They also will often be part of limited woodland communities in protected areas along the coast. When it occurs in woodland or open forest it is often associated with peppermint trees (''Agonis flexuosa'') in the understorey.


Uses

As a durable hardwood the timber is sought after for scantlings, structural timber, the construction of railway carriages, and boat building. The colouring and grain pattern of the timber also makes it a popular choice for furniture manufactures. Due to over-logging the tuart is a protected tree with conditions placed on felling. The heartwood is a pale yellow-brown colour with a fine texture and a highly interlocked grain, close and twisted, almost curled back. The green wood has a density of and an air-dried density of . The flowers are an excellent source for the production of honey. The colour of the product is described as light and creamy and it candies quickly to become hard and dry if properly matured in the hive. The quality of the source was noted as very high in 1939, although it was determined to be an 'undependable source' thirty years later.


Ecology

The tree is moderately tolerant of saline soil and salt-laden winds. It is also drought and frost tolerant. Individual trees may live over four hundred years. Experimental cultivation in the 1930s of the species identified that it was able to grow in areas of low rainfall, as little as thirteen inches per annum. They were introduced to France and grown extensively there by the end of the nineteenth century, The biodiversity of tuart forest is rich, containing unique assemblages of plants, fungi and animals. A 2009 survey of endophytic fungi on woody species at two tuart woodlands, sampling acacia ''Acacia cochlearis'', ''Acacia rostellifera, A. rostellifera'', the sheoak ''Allocasuarina fraseriana'', peppermint ''Agonis flexuosa'', ''Banksia grandis'', sandalwood ''Santalum acuminatum'', and eucalypts jarrah ''Eucalyptus marginata'' and tuart, found around three quarters of isolates were taxa of the family Botryosphaeriaceae, eighty percent of which was the species ''Neofusicoccum australe''. Four new taxa, ''Dothiorella moneti'', ''Dothiorella santali'', ''Neofusicoccum pennatisporum'', and ''Aplosporella yalgorensis'', resulted from the analysis of the survey. The species ''Botryosphaeria dothidea'' was also isolated from acacia and jarrah samples. Tuart gives its name to a description of an ecological community, as the dominant species of the canopy at Tuart forest, Tuart (''Eucalyptus gomphocephala'') woodlands and forests of the Swan Coastal Plain (Tuart woodlands and forests). The area where these occur is noted as a greatly reduced, and those remaining are fragmented populations of variable quality. A proposal submitted in 2017 recommended these be listed as critically endangered in the nation's register of threatened ecological communities. Tuart may also occur in the threatened community Banksia woodlands of the Swan Coastal Plain. The species is vulnerable to dieback, associated with fungal species of the genus ''Phytophthora''. A study in 2007 of infected or deceased tuart trees and woodland identified isolates of ''Phytophthora cinnamomi'', already implicated in the decline of tuart, and that of organisms—previously diagnosed as that of the ''Phytophthora citricola'' complex—was identified as a new species ''Phytophthora multivora''. Damage to reproductive process by a native predator was first noticed at the end of the nineteenth century. Larvae deposited in flowers by the tuart bud weevil ''Haplonyx tibialis'' (Curculionidae) feed on the tissue in the operculum, the female weevil having caused the budding flower to become partly or completely damaged after laying a single egg; the larvae eventually emerge by chewing through the base of the bud. Tuart forest persisted ''in situ'' through the last glacial maximum, and extended its range thirty kilometres to the west as the coastline became exposed by lower sea levels. The historical phylogeography of the tuart forest indicates the moderating influence of the marine climate in the Southwest Australian Floristic Region during a period of aridification and other severe climate changes elsewhere on the continent.


Natural history

The extent and maturity of tuart forest and woodland was greatly reduced after colonisation. When Charles Fraser (botanist), Charles Fraser viewed them during a preliminary exploration toward Guildford he remarked on their 'stupendous' size. Drummond recorded specimens between nine and thirteen metres in circumference at a forest north of Busselton. The timber from the colony's first sawmill, amongst tuart forest at Kings Park, Western Australia, Kings Park, was used by Henry Trigg for construction of the new government's infrastructure; Trigg describes the "Tewart" wood's desirable qualities, durable, yet workable, as similar to white gum [eucalypt] and the ''lignum vitae'' of the South American genus ''Guaiacum''. The four ton cogwheels at the Old Mill, Perth were hewn from this wood. The utility of the timber was remarked on by George Fletcher Moore, the 1830s colonial diarist, the value to industries such as shipbuilding was derived from its resistance to splitting and splintering. The British Admiralty received loads of this timber at Portsmouth and Chatham Historic Dockyard, Chatham during the 1850–60s, exported from Wonnerup and Bunbury, Western Australia, an inspection by Thomas Laslett also gave the most favourable possible assessment. A plan to export a tuart to the 1851 Great Exhibition was abandoned when an adequate saw could not be found. The timber was given additional value due to the proximity of the forests to ports at the coast. The land made available by the destruction of forests was recommended for the introduction of species at orchards, producing apples, grapes, pears, peaches and nectarines, by the state's Department of Agriculture in the 1890s. The timber produced in the state forest during the early twentieth century was used for railway carriages, greatly reducing costs by replacing steel with tuart and wandoo. The wood was only available in small quantities for private uses, notably stair treads and the favoured source for butcher's blocks. The species was surveyed in 1882 by Surveyor General Malcolm Fraser (surveyor), Malcolm Fraser, his map showing them occurring at an area measuring 130000 hectares. They were well known to the settlers of the Swan River Colony, the first road from the port to the capital passed through what they named as Claremont Tuart Forest. The first state conservator of forest, John Ednie Brown, reported the remaining extent of tuart forest as 81000ha in 1895, impressed by straight trunked specimens to 50m high and 7m circumference, while conceding the density and condition of them prior to his survey were not known to him. The 1903-04 Royal Commission on Forestry, hearing evidence from sawmiller and government member H. J. Yelverton, reported just over 40000ha remained, and that reduced tonnage from areas where "prime trees", those over 0.8m in diameter and mostly harvested, had not been found. The conservation of this species was proposed in the commission's summary, emphasising "Tuart is the most valuable tree …". This eventually took the form of a regulation on export of tuart, although this was to reserve the timber for its biggest consumer, the state's railway system. When a political means of conserving forest was enacted in 1918, the state conservator Charles Lane Poole's recommendation was the purchase of a 400ha area near Wonnerup, State Forest No. 1 was described as "… the last remaining virgin tuart in the world". The State Forest was increased with adjoining areas to around two and a half thousand hectares by 1922, and slightly reduced in 1927 by the conservator S. L. Kessel; his explanation for this change was "… due to the reduction of areas". The state sawmill supplying the railway operated in the forest until 1929, using 'over mature' trees for the covered goods wagon, railway trucks being built at the Midland works. At the beginning of the twenty first century most of the tuart forest had been felled or cleared, and what remained was recognised as declining in diversity and health of this tree and the assemblages of associated plants, animals and fungi.


Gallery

Eucalyptus gomphocephala in Kings Park closeup near ground.jpg, Kings park Ludlow forest gnangarra 04.JPG, Bark on trunk Eucalyptus gomphocephala 1.jpg, Los Angeles County Arboretum, Arcadia, California. The Wonnerup Giant.jpg, The Wonnerup Giant, the largest tuart The Shedded Giant.jpg, The Shedded Giant, the largest girthed tuart


References

;Footnotes ;Bibliography * Bryant, Geoff (2005) ''Australian Native Plants'' Random House * Johnston, Judith (1993) ''The History of the Tuart Forest'' - pp. 136–153 in de Garis, B.K. (editor) ''Portraits of the South West: Aborigines, Women and the Environment'' Nedlands, W.A. University of Western Australia Press


External links

* Tuart Response Group (W.A.) (2003)
An Atlas of Tuart woodlands on the Swan Coastal Plain in Western Australia
' Perth, W. Aust.:Dept. of Conservation and Land Management (coordinated by a multi-disciplinary steering group chaired by the Department of Conservation and Land Management" {{Authority control Trees of Australia Trees of Mediterranean climate Eucalypts of Western Australia Eucalyptus, gomphocephala Myrtales of Australia Swan Coastal Plain Forests of Western Australia Plants described in 1828 Taxa named by Augustin Pyramus de Candolle Endemic flora of Southwest Australia