Buloke Bull-oak

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Colleen Miller | Colleen Miller

Allocasuarina luehmannii


Dull green erect tree to 15 m tall. Straight trunk with dark furrowed bark. Upright branchlets approximately 40 cm long. Male flower spikes are yellow. Roots may produce suckers.


Details
Flora Type
Trees
Former Scientific Name
Casuarina luehmannii
Distinctive Features

Many segments along each branch each ending in a whorl of 10-14 tiny slightly overlapping teeth which are tightly pressed to the branch.

Biology

Perennial. Male and female flowers are found on separate plants. Wind pollinated. Nitrogen-fixing plant. Heavy soils. Tolerates periods of drought and inundation.

Native Status
Native
Flowering Time

Oct-Nov

Taxonomy
Phylum
Tracheophyta (Vascular Plants)
Class
Magnoliopsida (Flowering Plants)
Order
Fagales
Family
Casuarinaceae
Genus
Allocasuarina
Species
luehmannii

Integral to the survival of the endangered south-eastern subspecies of the Red-tailed Black Cockatoo for feeding and nesting. Young stems and food used as food by Aboriginal people, and the wood used for spears, clubs and fibremaking (Tas). Listed as threatened in Vic.


Interesting Facts
Similar Species

0

Native Status
Native