You mean you didn't know?! Well I admit that it's hardly a long-established tradition (yet) but on the other hand I didn't invent it. It goes back to someone you may not have heard of either - Norwegian-Australian forester Bjarne Dahl, who came to Australia to work for the Victoria Forests Commission
in 1928 and stayed until his death in 1993, 65 years later. He and two compatriots worked as Forest Assessors (no, I'm not quite sure either, but it involved mapping and measuring trees) and he rapidly became a big fan of eucalypts. He was especially fond of the handsome Silvertop Ash Eucalyptus sieberi.
Silvertop Ash, Barren Grounds Nature Reserve, New South Wales. |
In 1945 he started a school to teach other assessors the skills, but later retired and worked for the paper industry as an acquirer of suitable land. He also made money buying and selling land in a private capacity, but on the death of his wife in 1976 he became a recluse. When he died in 1993, aged 95, he left his estate of $2.5 million to the Victorian Forestry Commission to establish a trust for the promotion of eucalypts (though I can't find his exact wording); in the light of many of the Commission's activities some might think this a somewhat surprising decision. Fortunately there obviously were indications of his intents, because in 2007 the Victorian Supreme Court defined the Trust's objectives and structure, enabling the Bjarne Dahl Trust to be set up as an independent entity.
It describes itself as "a charitable trust that awards grants to support the conservation, education and research of eucalypts." (I'm not entirely sure how one goes about educating eucalypts but it would pedantic and churlish to even ask.) Among the things it has done was to declare in 2014 that 23 March - Bjarne's birthday - would henceforth be celebrated as National Eucalypt Day, which is why you're reading this.
'Eucalypt' refers not just to the genus Eucalyptus, but to the closely related genera Angophora and the relatively recently separated Corymbia (bloodwoods, spotted gums and ghost gums).
'Eucalypt' refers not just to the genus Eucalyptus, but to the closely related genera Angophora and the relatively recently separated Corymbia (bloodwoods, spotted gums and ghost gums).
I want to spend the rest of this posting simply celebrating eucalypts, as Bjarne would have wished. I'm going to do it in the form of a Eucalypt Alphabet (as I've done previously for red flowers, yellow flowers, white flowers and acacias). However I haven't quite limited myself to just one species per letter as I have done in the past - it was too hard sometimes and I didn't see why we should miss out! In the event, my photos only failed to produce examples of species beginning with x and z, which I don't feel too bad about. I've tried to share some of the diversity of habitats and forms that make the more than 800 species of Australian eucalypts so captivating. (Six of those species are also found in New Guinea and nearby islands, and another nine are not Australian, found scattered as far as the Philippines, where there is just one species). I've included portraits of eucalypts from every Australian state and territory.
A
Ghost Gum Corymbia aparrerinja, near Trephina Gorge, East MacDonnell Ranges, Central Australia. A stunning tree (this one, and the whole species), with a distribution based around the central deserts. For a whole posting on this, one of my very favourite trees, see here. |
B
'B' is represented here by two species local to Canberra.
C
I just couldn't cut out any this quartet of very different eucalypts, so hopefully you'll understand!Ancient River Red Gums E. camaldulensis, Burra Gorge, South Australia. This is the only eucalypt found in every mainland Australian state and territory, mostly on inland waterways, and is my favourite Australian tree. For more about it, see this posting. |
Tasmanian Snow Gum E. coccifera, Mount Field NP, Tasmania. This spectacular gum is limited to the high mountain forests of southern Tasmania. |
D
Our two 'D' representatives are both seemingly growing straight out of solid rock but in very different habitats in distant parts of the country from each other.
Small-fruited Bloodwood Corymbia dichromophloia, Boodjamulla (Lawn Hill) NP, north-west Queensland. It grows west from here across northern Australia. |
E
F
White Ash E. fraxinoides, Monga NP, south-eastern NSW. A striking tree of mountain forests of the south-east part of the state, which seems to grow in tight altitudinal bands. |
G
H
I
J
K
Kondinin Blackbutt E. kondininensis, Kondinin (appropriately!), Goldfields region, southern inland Western Australia. Another of the numerous eucalypts with a small distribution in this area. |
L
Bushy Yate E. lehmannii, Cape Le Grande NP, southern WA. An attractive bushy little tree which has been widely cultivated. In the wild it grows along the central south coast of WA. |
M
There were too many impressive 'M' eucalypts as well to choose just one.
Spotted Gum Corymbia maculata, Nowra, south coast NSW. A superb tall coastal forest tree, whose spottiness is due to patchy shedding of the old bark. |
N
O
Red Mallee E. oleosa, far western South Australia. A common mallee in dry sandy country from south-western NSW and adjacent Victoria to the Goldfields of Western Australia. |
P
'P' seems to be another auspicious initial for eucalypts - I can't narrow it down beyond four very different trees!Rose-bud Mallee E. pachyphylla, Great Sandy Desert, Western Australia. A very hardy mallee of the central and western deserts. |
Very old Snow Gum E. pauciflora, Kosciuszko NP. The highest altitude eucalypt, whose upper level forms the tree line in the south-eastern mainland. For an entire post on this wonderful tree, see here. |
Bell-fruit Mallee E. preissiana, Stirling Ranges NP, southern WA. A lovely little mallee from the central south coast of Western Australia. Its name commemorates Johann Preiss who first collected it. |
Grey Gum E. punctata, Munghorn Gap NR, central NSW. A gum often associated with sandstone along the coast and ranges from Jervis Bay north to the Liverpool Ranges. |
Q
White-topped Box E. quadrangulata, Kangaroo Valley, southern NSW. An impressive tree which grows in small scattered populations north from Bundanoon to south-east Queensland |
R
S
Sydney Blue Gum E. saligna, Mount Clunie NP, far northern NSW. A magnificent huge wet forest tree which is fast-growing and features in plantations both here and in South Africa. |
Scribbly Gum (another one) E. signata, Coffs Harbour, north coast NSW. (This one is sometimes subsumed into E. racemosa.) |
Gimlet E. salubris east of Norseman. This stunningly beautiful small tree or mallee with fluted trunk grows in the dry inland of southern Western Australia. |
T
Desert Bloodwood Corymbia terminalis, Currawinya, south-central Queensland. A characteristic and attractive tree of the entire dry inland of Australia. |
Carbeen, or Moreton Bay Ash E. tessellaris, Charleville, central Queensland. A very distinctive tree with dark plated bark at the base and smooth white above, growing from northern NSW to Cape York. |
U
Merritt E. urna, Norseman, Goldfields region, southern inland WA. Yet another tree of the rich woodlands of southern inland WA; it was separated from the more widespread E. flocktoniae in 1999. |
V
Smooth-barked Coolibah E. victrix, north of Cue, central WA. A tree of flood plains and creek lines from the west coast to the central deserts. |
W
'W' has proved a source of frustration and a little embarrassment. I was confident of this one, knowing I had at least one nice pic of the beautiful Wandoo woodlands (E wandoo) east of Perth - but it has mysteriously vanished from my system!! And I have no other 'w' eucalypt so have had to revert to the somewhat desperate and shabby ploy of selecting one on common name - and moreover one growing in captivity! I abase myself.
Wallangarra White Gum E. scoparia, Wagga Wagga Botanic Gardens. The tree grows naturally in a tiny area of granite outcrops near the town of Wallangarra on the south-east Queensland-NSW border. |
X
As confessed at the start I can't offer you an 'x' eucalypt, though next time I'm in the Pilbara I'll take a photo of Pilbara Box E. xanthope.
Y
Z
I do like the sound of Blackbutt Mallee E. zopherophloia from a small area south of Geraldton, WA.
So again, Happy Eucalypt Day - and if you're not reading this on 23 March then I reckon that any day is a good one to celebrate eucalypts. I hope you've met a new one here, or learnt a new factoid to save for an appropriate occasion. More importantly though, please get out and enjoy some real ones!
NEXT POSTING THURSDAY 11 APRIL
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3 comments:
Fantastic post! Lots of work and background knowledge has gone into it and I really appreciate it. I've got so vague about eucalypts after such a long absence I don't even try to ID them any more.
Thanks Susan, your kind words greatly appreciated. Yes, it was quite a bit of work, but fun too. No real need for you to identify eucs these days - I’d be very vague about European trees. We focus our remaining faculties on what we experience and need. Feel free to share if you think anyone would be interested.
For some reason I have been forgetting to follow your blog and was delighted when I resumed last week to find this one on Eucalypts. Have you seen a Eucalyptus vernicosa, a shrubby variety from Tasmania? There are a few at the ANBG now and the easiest to find is in a tub near the Casuarina pond below the Cafe. It is beside the sign for the Eucalyptus regnans, the world's tallest flowering tree.
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