Black Peppermint
Eucalyptus amygdalina
Small tree with a mallee habit to 20 m tall, rough-barked for most of the tree but smooth-barked in upper branches. Green adult leaves are alternate and are lance-shaped or narrow and thin. Juvenile leaves similar but smaller. Flowers and gum-nuts in clusters of 5-12.
Details | |
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Flora Type | Trees |
Distinctive Features | Club-shaped buds. Seed capsule almost hemispherical with disk slightly sunken or flat with the valves level or slightly raised. |
Biology | Perennial. Endemic to Tas. This is one of the most widespread eucalypts in eastern Tas on shallow poor soils. Occurs in a range of environments including grassy woodlands and forests. Replaced by E. nitida in western Tas. |
Native Status | Native |
Taxonomy | |
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Phylum | Tracheophyta (Vascular Plants) |
Class | Magnoliopsida (Flowering Plants) |
Order | Myrtales |
Family | Myrtaceae |
Genus | Eucalyptus |
Species | amygdalina |
The seed and inner bark of some Eucalyptus species were used as a food source by Aboriginal people, as well as the gum and leaves for medicial purposes and wood and bark for fibre. Timber durable and used for fenceposts, and also firewood.
Interesting Facts | |
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Similar Species | Some fine-leafed forms on the east coast are indistuinguishable for White Peppermint E. pulchella. Hybridises with at least six other eucalypt species. |
Native Status | Native |