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Acacia ulicifolia

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Acacia ulicifolia (Salisb.) Court, Victorian Naturalist 73: 173 (1957)

Juniper Wattle, Prickly Moses

Erect, often straggly shrub mostly 1–2 m high. Branchlets sparsely to moderately hirsutellous to puberulous, at least at extremities. Stipules persistent, frequently >1 mm long. Phyllodes often crowded, subsessile, scattered, sometimes some subverticillate, patent, linear-triangular, flat except quadrangular when very narrow, 5–15 mm long but often <10 mm, 0.5–1.5 mm wide, pungent, rigid, green, usually glabrous; midrib prominent on each face; gland obscure, 0.5–3 mm above base. Inflorescences simple, 1 per axil; peduncles 7–15 mm long, slender, 0.3–0.5 mm diam. when dry, mostly glabrous; basal bracts 3 and fused; heads globular, 20–35-flowered, creamy yellow; bracteoles acuminate, not or scarcely exserted beyond flowers in buds. Flowers 5-merous; sepals free to 1/2-united; petals 1-nerved. Pods normally slightly constricted between seeds, 2–6 cm long, 4–6 mm wide, thinly coriaceous, dark brown to black, glabrous or subglabrous. Seeds longitudinal, oblong to elliptic, 3.5–5 mm long, normally mottled, exarillate; funicle filiform.

Occurs in the Great Divide of eastern Australia from the Grampians, Vic., through N.S.W. and A.C.T. to the Blackdown Tablelands and Ravenshoe in Qld; also NE Tas. Usually grows in sand (often over sandstone), in heath or dry sclerophyll woodland or open forest. Flowers Apr.- Oct.

Acacia ulicifolia together with A. asparagoides , A. brachycarpa , A. brownii , A. echinula , A. gunnii and A. saxicola comprise the ‘A. ulicifolia group’. Acacia quadrilateralis and A. siculiformis are not far removed from this group. The important characters of the ‘A. ulicifolia group’ include the following: phyllodes small, pungent, 4-nerved (1-nerved per face when flat) with the adaxial nerve bifurcating at the gland; basal peduncular bracts 3, commonly fused; flowers 5-merous; funicle filiform, non-arillate. Acacia brownii is sometimes treated as a variety of A. ulicifolia , e.g. L.Pedley, Austrobaileya 1: 239 (1980). However, adoption of this approach would necessitate a similar reduction in rank for A. asparagoides , A. echinula , A. saxicola and perhaps also A. brachycarpa . Such changes warrant more study than has been possible to date.

Phyllodes and flower-heads resemble A. rupicola .

Three variants, sometimes sympatric with the typical variant, occur on the north and central coast of N.S.W.: (1) a maritime variant characterised by its compact growth habit, sometimes reaching only 0.5 m in height (e.g. Tiona Beach, 8 km S of Forster, E.F.Constable 1288 , NSW), (2) a slender phyllode variant (e.g. c. 4.8 km W of Wingham, 1.6 km SW of Koolee Flat, H.Salasoo 2783 , NSW) and (3) a hairy phyllode variant (e.g. 10 km N of Dural, on the main road to Wiseman’s Ferry, M.D.Tindale s.n ., NSW167328, PERTH).

In central eastern N.S.W. there is intergradation of A. asparagoides , A. brownii , A. echinula and A. ulicifolia , particularly A. ulicifolia - A. brownii and A. ulicifolia - A. echinula and they may form hybrids, fide T.Tame, Acacias SE Australia 96 (1992). May be confused with narrow phyllode forms of A. gunnii ; these two species are sometimes sympatric and possible hybrids between them are reported by T.J.Entwistle et al ., in N.G.Walsh & T.J.Entwisle (eds), Fl. Victoria 3: 630 (1996).

Type of accepted name

Near Port Jackson, N.S.W., D.Burton ; n.v.

Synonymy

Mimosa ulicifolia Salisb., Prodr. Stirp. Chap. Allerton 324 (1796); Acacia verticillata var. l atifolia DC., Prodr . 2: 454 (1825); Racosperma ulicifolium (Salisb.) Pedley, Austrobaileya 2: 356 (1987). Type: as for accepted name.

Mimosa juniperina Vent., Jard. Malmaison 2: t. 64 (1804); Phyllodoce juniperina (Vent.) Link, Handbuch 2: 133 (1831). Type: Cultivated from material originating from near Port Jackson, N.S.W.; photo K.

Mimosa ulicifolia J.C.Wendl., Coll. Pl . 1: 25, t. 6 (1805), nom. illeg. , non Salisb. (1796); Acacia juniperina Willd., Sp. Pl. 4th edn, 4: 1049 (1806); A. dillwyniifolia Courtois (as ‘dillwynifolia’), Mag . Hort. (Liege) 1: 10 (1833), nom. illeg. (should have adopted the name A. juniperina Willd.). Type: Australia; n.v.

Acacia pungens Spreng., Syst. Veg. 16th edn, 3: 134 (1826). Type: ‘A. juniperina Sieb.’, Australia; n.v. Synonymy following G.Bentham, Fl. Austral. 2: 332 (1864).

Acacia juniperina var. typica Domin, Biblioth. Bot. 89: 250 (1926), nom. inval.

[ Acacia echinula auct. non DC.: L.Pedley, Contr. Queensland Herb. 4: 4 (1969), fide L.Pedley, Austrobaileya 1: 239 (1979)].

Illustrations

N.T.Burbidge & M.Gray, Fl. Austral. Cap. Terr. 199, fig. 193F (1970); L.F.Costermans, Native Trees & Shrubs SE Australia 308 (1981); B.A.Lebler, Wildfl. SE Queensland 2: 43 (1981) T.Tame, Acacias SE Australia 96, fig. 89, pl. 89 (1992).

Representative collections

Qld: near Ravenshoe, S.J.Dansie 203a (BRI n.v. ). N.S.W.: c. 1.6 km NE of Kariong, R.Coveny 4876 (AD, B, BRI, CANB, G, K, L, LE, NSW, PERTH, U, US). A.C.T.: Kowen, H.S.McKee 9570 (CANB). Vic.: c. 11 km due SSW of Mallacoota P.O., A.C.Beauglehole 31167 (MEL, PERTH). Tas.: Freycinet Penin., 19 Sept. 1962, D.W.Shoobridge (CANB).

(BRM)

WATTLE Acacias of Australia CD-ROM graphic

The information presented here originally appeared on the WATTLE CD-ROM which was jointly published by the Australian Biological Resources Study, Canberra, and the Department of Parks and Wildlife, Perth; it was produced by CSIRO Publishing from where it is available for purchase. The WATTLE custodians are thanked for allowing us to post this information here.

Page last updated: Thursday 22 June 2023