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Acacia crispula

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Acacia crispula Benth., Linnaea 26: 606 (1855)

Multistemmed, prostrate or low-spreading shrub to 0.3 m high. Branchlets hirsutellous or hirsutellous and pilose intermixed. Stipules persistent, linear, 2–6 mm long. Phyllodes oblique, elliptic or narrowly elliptic to lanceolate, infrequently obovate or narrowly oblong, 1–3 cm long, 2–12 mm wide, undulate, acute to obtuse and apiculate-mucronulate, pilose or hirsutellous or a mixture of both, 1-nerved per face; lateral nerves obscure. Inflorescences simple or in racemes 0.5–3 mm long, 1 or 2 per axil; peduncles usually 1–2.5 cm long, with indumentum as on branchlets; heads globular, 4–4.5 mm diam., 10–20-flowered, pale yellow. Flowers 5-merous; sepals 1/2–3/4-united, the lobes acute, the calyx tube 5-nerved; petals pilose to hirsutellous, 1-nerved. Pods narrowly oblong, straight or arcuate, 1–4 cm long, 5–7 mm wide, crustaceous to coriaceous, glabrous or pubescent as branchlets. Seeds transverse, oblong-elliptic, 3–3.5 mm long, shiny, black, arillate.

Gordon R. near Cranbrook E to near Cape Arid, south-western W.A., with one collection ( R.D.Royce 9805 , PERTH) from near Wagin, c. 140 km N of Cranbrook. Grows in sand, sandy or gravelly clay, sandy loam and loam, mostly in mallee shrubland but also in heath, low scrub and open wandoo flats.

Phyllodes are variable in size: the type of A. crispula (phyllodes 2–2.5 mm wide) and of A. pilosa (phyllodes 6–12 mm wide) encompass the variational limits of phyllode width for the species.

A.S.George 3148 (PERTH), from Bluff Knoll in Stirling Ra., has shorter than normal phyllodes (4–6 mm long). It also has very narrow phyllodes like the type of A. crispula which has short peduncles (6–7 mm long). This suggests that perhaps the type was collected from a peak in the Stirling Ra. The Maxwell specimen from near Cape Arid (at the eastern limit of the range) has unusual phyllodes which resemble some forms of A. crassistipula ; they are lanceolate, elongate (l:w = 6) and have narrowed to recurved apices; in A. crispula the apices are commonly straight. Acacia crassistipula is readily distinguished from most other Acacia species by its foliaceous stipules.

Similar to A. shuttleworthii which has generally shorter stipules, phyllodes and peduncles. Also with affinity to A. crassistipula and A. gregorii .

Type of accepted name

South west Australia, J.Drummond 78 ; syn: K (four specimens on sheet), NSW, PERTH.

Synonymy

Acacia pilosa Benth., Linnaea 26: 607 (1855), non Bertero ex DC. (1825). Type: Swan R., W.A., J.Drummond 5: 12 ; syn: K (herb. Bentham and herb. Hooker, 2 sheets); isosyn: BM, CGE, MEL, NSW, OXF, P, PERTH; Swan R., W.A., 1845, J.Drummond supplement no. 35 ; syn: K, MEL.

Illustration

M.Simmons, Acacias Australia 2: 97 (1988), as A. pilosa .

Representative collections

W.A.: base of Mondurup Peak, Stirling Ra., R.J.Cumming 997 (PERTH, TLF); c. 10 km ESE of Howick Hill, E.N.S.Jackson 1237 (PERTH); Mt Melville near Cape Riche, B.R.Maslin 1057 (AD, BRI, K, MEL, NSW, PERTH); near Cape Arid, 1875 [G.] Maxwell s.n. (PERTH ex MEL); 8 km N of Ravensthorpe in Ravensthorpe Ra., P.G.Wilson 7105 (CANB, PERTH).

(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