Acacia Pycnantha: Golden Wattle
Acacia Pycnantha: Golden Wattle
Acacia Pycnantha: Golden Wattle
1
Acacia pycnantha
Golden wattle
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Eudicots
(unranked): Rosids
Order: Fabales
Family: Mimosaceae
Genus: Acacia
Species: A. pycnantha
Binomial name
Acacia pycnantha
Benth.
Synonyms
Acacia pycnantha, commonly known as the golden wattle, is a tree of the family Mimosaceae native to southern
Australia. It grows to a height of 8m (25ft) and has sickle-shaped phyllodes instead of true leaves. The profuse
fragrant, fluffy, golden flowers appear in late winter and spring, followed by long seed pods. Plants are
cross-pollinated by several species of honeyeater and thornbill, which visit nectaries on the phyllodes and brush
against flowers, transferring pollen between them.
Explorer Thomas Mitchell collected the type specimen, from which George Bentham wrote the species description
in 1842. No subspecies are recognised. Acacia pycnantha has been cultivated commercially for tannin production,
and its bark produces more than any other species of wattle. It has been widely grown as an ornamental garden plant
and for cut flower production, but has become a weed in South Africa, Tanzania, Italy, Portugal, Sardinia, India,
Indonesia, New Zealand, as well as Western Australia, Tasmania and New South Wales. Acacia pycnantha was
made the official floral emblem of Australia in 1988.
Acacia pycnantha
2
Description
Habit, Geelong Botanic Gardens
Acacia pycnantha generally grows as a small tree to between 3 and 8 m
(1025ft) in height,
[1]
though trees of up to 12m (40ft) high have
been reported in Morocco. The bark is generally dark brown to
greysmooth in younger plants though can be furrowed and rough in
older plants. Branchlets may be bare and smooth or covered with a
white bloom.
[1]
The mature trees do not have true leaves but have
phyllodes that hang down from the branches. Shiny and dark green,
these are between 9 and 15cm (3.59in) long, 13.5cm (
1
2
1
1
2
in)
wide and falcate (sickle-shaped) to oblanceolate in shape.
[1]
New
growth has a bronze coloration. Field observations at Hale
Conservation Park show the bulk of new growth to take place from
October to January. Floral buds are produced year-round on the tips of
new growth, but only those initiated between November and May go
on to flower several months later. The later the bud develops in this
period, the faster it proceeds, so that flowering peaks over July and
August.
Flowering usually takes place from July to November in the golden wattle's native range. The rounded inflorescences
are bright yellow and occur in groups of 40 to 80 in axillary 2.59cm (13
1
2
in)-long racemes.
[1]
Each
inflorescence is made up of 50 to 100 tiny flowers. The later developing pods are flattish, straight or slightly curved,
514cm (25
1
2
in) long and 0.50.8cm (
1
4
in) wide. They are initially bright green, maturing to dark brown
and have slight constrictions between the seeds, which are arranged in a line in the pod. The oblong seeds themselves
are 5.5 to 6mm long, black and shiny, with a clavate (club-shaped) aril.
[1]
They are released once the pods are fully
ripe in December and January.
Species similar in appearance include mountain hickory wattle (A. obliquinervia), coast golden wattle (A. leiophylla)
and golden wreath wattle (A. saligna).
[1]
A. obliquinervia has grey-green phyllodes, fewer flowers in its flower
heads, and broader (1.252.5cm (
1
2
1in)-wide) seed pods.
[2]
A. leiophylla has paler phyllodes.
[3]
A. saligna has
longer, narrower phyllodes.
Taxonomy
Acacia pycnantha was first formally described by botanist George Bentham in the London Journal of Botany in
1842. The type specimen was collected by the explorer Thomas Mitchell in present-day northern Victoria between
Pyramid Hill and the Loddon River.
[4]
Bentham thought it was related to A. leiophylla, which he described in the
same paper. The specific epithet pycnantha is derived from the Greek words pyknos (dense) and anthos (flowers), a
reference to the dense cluster of flowers that make up the globular inflorescences. Queensland botanist Les Pedley
reclassified the species as Racosperma pycnanthum in 2003, when he proposed placing almost all Australian
members of the genus into the new genus Racosperma. However, this name is treated as a synonym of its original
name.
Johann Georg Christian Lehmann described Acacia petiolaris in 1851 from a plant grown at Hamburg Botanic
Gardens from seed said to be from the Swan River Colony (Perth).
[4]
Carl Meissner described A. falcinella from
material from Port Lincoln in 1855. Bentham classified both as A. pycnantha in his 1864 Flora Australiensis, though
he did categorise a possible subspecies angustifolia based on material from Spencer Gulf with narrower phyllodes
and fewer inflorescences. However, no subspecies are currently recognised, though an informal classification
distinguishes wetland and dryland forms, the latter with narrower phyllodes.
Acacia pycnantha
3
In 1921 Joseph Maiden described Acacia westonii from the northern and western slopes of Mount Jerrabomberra
near Queanbeyan in New South Wales. He felt it was similar to, but distinct from, A. pycnantha and was uncertain
whether it warranted species rank. His colleague Richard Hind Cambage grew seedlings and reported they had much
longer internodes than those of A. pycnantha, and that the phyllodes appeared to have three nectaries rather than the
single one of the latter species. It is now regarded as a synonym of A. pycnantha.
Common names recorded include golden wattle, green wattle, black wattle, and broad-leaved wattle. At Ebenezer
Mission in the Wergaia country of north-western Victoria the aborigines referred to it as witch.
Hybrids of the species are known in nature and cultivation. In the Whipstick forest near Bendigo in Victoria, putative
hybrids with Whirrakee wattle (Acacia williamsonii) have been identified; these resemble hakea wattle (Acacia
hakeoides).
[1]
Garden hybrids with Queensland silver wattle (Acacia podalyriifolia) raised in Europe have been
given the names Acacia x siebertiana and Acacia x deneufvillei.
Distribution and habitat
Galls formed by Trichilogaster signiventris
wasps on a plant in South Africa
Golden wattle occurs in south-eastern Australia from South Australia's
southern Eyre Peninsula across Victoria and northwards into inland
areas of southern New South Wales and the Australian Capital
Territory. It is found in the understorey of open eucalypt forests on dry,
shallow soils.
The species has become naturalised beyond its original range in
Australia. In New South Wales it is especially prevalent around
Sydney and the Central Coast region. In Tasmania it has spread in the
east of the state and become problematic in bushland near Hobart. In
Western Australia, it is found in the Darling Range and western
wheatbelt as well as Esperance and Kalgoorlie.
Outside Australia it has become naturalised in South Africa, Tanzania, Italy, Portugal, Sardinia, India, Indonesia and
New Zealand. It is present in California as a garden escapee, but is not considered to be naturalised there. In South
Africa, where it had been introduced between 1858 and 1865 for dune stabilization and tannin production, it had
spread along waterways into forest, mountain and lowland fynbos, and borderline areas between fynbos and karoo.
The gall-forming wasp Trichilogaster signiventris has been introduced in South Africa for biological control and has
reduced the capacity of trees to reproduce throughout their range. The eggs are laid by adult wasps into buds of
flower heads in the summer, before hatching in May and June when the larvae induce the formation of the grape-like
galls and prevent flower development. The galls can be so heavy that branches break under their weight. In addition,
the introduction in 2001 of the acacia seed weevil Melanterius compactus has also proved effective.
Acacia pycnantha
4
Ecology
Hoverfly visiting nectary on phyllode
Though plants are usually killed by a severe fire, mature specimens are
able to resprout. Seeds are able to persist in the soil for more than five
years, germinating after fire.
Self-incompatible, Acacia pycnantha requires cross-pollination
between plants to set seed. Birds facilitate this and field experiments
keeping birds away from flowers greatly reduces seed production.
Nectaries are located on phyllodes; those near open flowers become
active, producing nectar that birds feed upon just before or during
flowering. While feeding, birds brush against the flower heads and
dislodge pollen and often visit multiple trees. Several species of
honeyeater, including the white-naped, yellow-faced, New Holland, and occasionally white-plumed, crescent,
white-naped honeyeaters and Eastern spinebills have been observed foraging. Other bird species include the
silvereye, striated, buff-rumped and brown thornbills. As well as eating nectar, birds often pick off insects on the
foliage. Honeybees, native bees, ants and flies also visit nectaries, but generally only one or a few and do not come
into contact with the flowers during this activity. The presence of Acacia pycnantha is positively correlated with
numbers of swift parrots overwintering in boxironbark forest in central Victoria, though it is not clear whether the
parrots are feeding on them or some other factor is at play.
The wood serves as food for larvae of the jewel beetle species Agrilus assimilis, A. australasiae and A. hypoleucus.
The larvae of a number of butterfly species feed on the foliage including the fiery jewel, icilius blue, lithocroa blue
and wattle blue. Trichilogaster wasps form galls in the flowerheads, disrupting seed set and Acizzia
acaciaepycnanthae, a psyllid, sucks sap from the leaves. Acacia pycnantha is a host to rust fungus species in the
genus Uromycladium that affect the phyllodes and branches. These include Uromycladium simplex that forms
pustules and U. tepperianum that causes large swollen brown to black galls that eventually lead to the death of the
host plant. Two fungal species have been isolated from leaf spots on Acacia pycnantha: Seimatosporium arbuti,
which is found on a wide range of plant hosts, and Monochaetia lutea.
Uses
Trunk exuding gum
Golden wattle has been grown in temperate regions around the world
for the tannin in its bark, as it provides the highest yield of all wattles.
Trees can be harvested for tannin from seven to ten years of age.
Commercial use of its timber is limited by the small size of trees, but is
has high value as a fuel wood. The scented flowers have been used for
perfume making, and honey production in humid areas. However, the
pollen is too dry to be collected by bees in dry climates. In southern
Europe, it is one of several species grown for the cut-flower trade and
sold as "mimosa". Like many other species of wattle, Acacia
pycnantha exudes gum when stressed. Eaten by indigenous
Australians, the gum has been investigated as a possible alternative to
gum arabic, commonly used in the food industry.
[1]
Acacia pycnantha
5
Cultivation
Golden wattle is cultivated in Australia and was introduced to the northern hemisphere in the mid-1800s. Although it
is short lived, it is widely grown for its bright yellow, fragrant flowers. As well as being an ornamental plant, it has
been used as a windbreak or in controlling erosion. Trees are sometimes planted with the taller sugar gum
(Eucalyptus cladocalyx) to make a two-layered windbreak. One form widely cultivated was originally collected on
Mount Arapiles in western Victoria. It is floriferous, with fragrant flowers appearing from April to July.
[5]
The
species has a degree of frost tolerance and is adaptable to a wide range of soil conditions, but it prefers good
drainage.
[5]
It tolerates heavy soils in dry climates, as well as mild soil salinity. It can suffer yellowing (chlorosis) in
limestone-based (alkaline) soils. Highly drought-tolerant, it needs 370 to 550mm winter rainfall for cultivation. It is
vulnerable to gall attack in cultivation. Propagation is from seed which has been pre-soaked in hot water to soften the
hard seed coating.
Symbolic and cultural references
Golden wattle in full flower
Although wattles, and in particular the golden wattle, have been the
informal floral emblem of Australia for many years, it was not until
Australia's bicentenary in 1988 that the golden wattle was formally
adopted as the floral emblem of Australia. This was proclaimed by
Governor-General Sir Ninian Stephen in the Government gazette
published on 1 September. The day was marked by a ceremony at the
Australian National Botanic Gardens which included the planting of a
golden wattle by Hazel Hawke, the Prime Minister's wife. In 1992, 1
September was formally declared "National Wattle Day".
The Australian Coat of Arms includes a wreath of wattle; this does not,
however, accurately represent a golden wattle. Similarly, the green and gold colours used by Australian international
sporting teams were inspired by the colours of wattles in general, rather than the golden wattle specifically.
The species was depicted on a stamp captioned "wattle" as part of a 195960 Australian stamp set featuring
Australian native flowers. In 1970, a 5c stamp labelled "Golden Wattle" was issued to complement an earlier set
depicting the floral emblems of Australia. To mark Australia Day in 1990, a 41c stamp labelled "Acacia pycnantha"
was issued. Another stamp labelled "Golden Wattle", with a value of 70c, was issued in 2014.
References
[1] [1] Kodela 2001, p.298.
[2] [2] Kodela 2001, p.251.
[3] Elliot & Jones 1985, p.74.
[4] [4] Kodela 2001, p.297.
[5] Elliot & Jones 1985, p.103.
Cited texts
Elliot, Rodger W.; Jones, David L.; Blake, Trevor (1985). Encyclopaedia of Australian Plants Suitable for
Cultivation: Vol. 2. Port Melbourne, Victoria: Lothian Press. p.103. ISBN0-85091-143-5.
Kodela, Phillip G. (2001). "Acacia" (http:/ / books. google. com. au/ books?id=ejr44b2rnjQC& pg=PA610&
dq=Acacia+ parramattensis& hl=en& sa=X& ei=EavJU9-PKJTs8AWkuYHoAQ&
ved=0CDgQ6AEwBg#v=onepage& q=Acacia pycnantha& f=false). In Wilson, Annette; Orchard, Anthony E.
Flora of Australia. Volume 11A, 11B, Part 1: Mimosaceae, Acacia. CSIRO Publishing / Australian Biological
Resources Study. pp.29798. ISBN978-0-643-06718-9.
Acacia pycnantha
6
External links
Media related to Acacia pycnantha at Wikimedia Commons
Article Sources and Contributors
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Article Sources and Contributors
Acacia pycnantha Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=626856900 Contributors: Abu Shawka, Ale jrb, Ally Oxford, AndrewHowse, Berichard, Bidgee, Casliber, Colonies Chris,
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Howcheng, Hqb, HugoRain, IRP, J Milburn, JoJan, Jonkerz, Josh Parris, Jusdafax, Jwoodger, Manytexts, Materialscientist, Matticus78, Mdebets, Mdhowe, Melburnian, Michael Devore, Mr
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