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866 Sentences With "phyllodes"

How to use phyllodes in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "phyllodes" and check conjugation/comparative form for "phyllodes". Mastering all the usages of "phyllodes" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"Phyllodes tumors are always removed, because the malignant ones are deadly and the benign ones [can] grow out of control," says Dr. Euhus.
Phyllodes tumors are considered to be on a spectrum of disease that consists of fibroadenoma, fibroadenoma variant and benign phyllodes. Some would extend the spectrum to include malignant phyllodes tumors and frank sarcoma.
Dermatobranchus phyllodes is a species of sea slug, a nudibranch, a marine gastropod mollusc in the family Arminidae.Bouchet, P. (2015). Dermatobranchus phyllodes. In: MolluscaBase (2015).
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has reddish to brown branchlets that are usually hairy. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes have a straight narrowly elliptic to oblanceolate shaped phyllodes with an excentric mucro. The glabrous to sub-glabrous phyllodes are in length and wide with a single nerve per face and age to a red colour.
The erect tree or shrub typically grows to a height of . It has glabrous branchlets that are tomentulose in axils where the phyllodes are found. The erect, terete and evergreen phyllodes are straight to slightly curved. The rigid an glaucous phyllodes have a length of and a diameter of .
The diffuse openly branched shrub typically grows to a height of . It has glabrous or sparsely haired grey coloured branchlets with long stipules. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The phyllodes are arrnaged in whorls with six to nine phyllodes in each group.
The phyllodes have a length of and a width of and can be coarsely to sharply pungent. The glabrous and rigid phyllodes have five to seven raised and equally prominent nerves.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has glabrous branchlets that are scarred in places where the phyllodes are lost and with caducous stipules that are in length. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The crowded, patent and evergreen phyllodes have a triangular to oblong-triangular shape with a broad base. The phyllodes are in length and wide and have three to seven indistinct longitudinal nerves per face.
The diffuse, spreading shrub typically grows to a height of . The branchlets are covered with densely matted woolly velvety yellow hairs that area about in length and also have long stipules. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The phyllodes occur in whorls containing 12 to 15 individual phyllodes.
It grows to high and has an erect to spreading habit with terete and glabrous branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The decurrent phyllodes which are falcate or sigmoidal in shape and have a length of with a width of . The evergreen phyllodes have many longitudinal veins that are very close together.
The erect shrub has green phyllodes that are long and wide. The terete and slightly hairy banchlets have persistent stipules with a length of . The patent, oblong phyllodes have a subquadrate or oblong-elliptic shape that is asymmetric. The pungent rigid phyllodes are in length and have a width of with three to four distinct veins.
The patent to ascending pungent Phyllodes mostly patent to ascending phyllodes are clustered together in groups of two to four on each node, linear. The rigid evergreen phyllodes are straight and flat with a length of with eight nerves in all with three distant raised nerves on each face. It blooms from November to February and produces yellow flowers.
The often spindly shrub or tree typically grows to a height of . The green to grey-green phyllodes are patent to ascending. The phyllodes are straight and usually slightly asymmetric with an oblanceolate to narrowly oblong-elliptic shape with a length of and a width of . The phyllodes are multistriate and normally have three nerves that are more obvious than the rest.
Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The grey to blue grey to dull green variable phyllodes have an elliptic or obovate to oblanceolate shape and are usually somewhat twisted or slightly undulate. The straight phyllodes have a length of and a width of with many longitudinal nerves. The simple inflorescences are long cylindrically shaped flower-spikes.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a height of and has a bushy and gnarled habit and has fissured, flaky bark. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The silvery evergreen phyllodes have an elliptic to linear shape and can be straight to slightly incurved. The pungent, subrigid phyllodes have length of and a width of .
The open spindly shrub typically grows to a height of . It has glabrous branchlets that are covered in a fine white powdery which are roughened by scars of fallen phyllodes. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The coriaceous grey-green phyllodes have an elliptic to ovate shape that is commonly shallowly concave and reflexed.
The shrub typically grows to a height of . Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen, glabrous or hairy phyllodes appear crowded on the branchlets. The rigid and pungent phyllodes have an inequilateral to shallowly triangular shape with a length of and a width of and also has a midrib near the abaxial margin.
The seeds are dull brown in colour, longitudinal and elliptic in shape and around long. It is closely related to Acacia cana which has silvery young phyllodes as well as Acacia coriacea which has longer phyllodes.
The seed pods ripen in November and December. The corymbose flowerheads of Daviesia corymbosa distinguish it from other bitter pea species. Furthermore, its green phyllodes contrast with the pale grey-green phyllodes of D. laevis and D. latifolia.
Like most species of Acacia it phyllodes rather than true leaves. The linear evergreen phyllodes taper towards the base and are infrequently curved towards the apex. The glabrous phyllodes have a length of and a width of flattened but still quite thick and uniformly finely striated with an obscure midnerve surrounded by many closely spaced longitudinal nerves. It blooms between July and November producing golden flowers.
The multi-stemmed tree or shrub typically grows to a height of and has an obconic habit and has glabrous branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The light green and terete phyllodes have with delicate brown points. The phyllodes grow to a length of and a width of and are not particularly rigid and usually shallowly incurved.
The gnarled and pungent tree or shrub typically grows to a height of and has glabrous branchlet. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The vertically deflexed phyllodes tend to be terete and straight with a length of and a width of . The long-tapering acuminate and glabrous phyllodes are quite rigid and pungent and have sixteen closely parallel and raised nerves.
True leaves are entirely replaced by long, wide phyllodes on an adult tree.
It is closely related to Acacia riceana but the phyllodes are more elongated.
Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The straight and dark green phyllodes are erect and crowded and have a narrowly oblong or linear to oblanceolate shape with an obscure midrib and no lateral nerves.
Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen, moderately coriaceous to sub-rigid phyllodes have a linear to narrowly elliptic shape with a length of and a width of with many fine parallel longitudinal nerves.
Phyllodes tumors (from Greek: phullon leaf), also cystosarcoma phyllodes, cystosarcoma phylloides and phylloides tumor, are typically large, fast- growing masses that form from the periductal stromal cells of the breast. They account for less than 1% of all breast neoplasms.
The shiny brown seeds are longitudinally arranged in the pod. They have an oblong to elliptic shape and are long. Like many other Acacia species, A. truncata has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The triangular phyllodes range from long and wide.
The grey-green, resinous and terete phyllodes narrow to a hard non-spiny point. The phyllodes are in length and have a diameter of around and have eight obscure nerves. It blooms from January to December and produces yellow flowers.
The spreading or compact, intricately branched shrub typically grows to a height of . It has striate and ribbed branches that are covered in a fine, white powdery coating with many short and spreading branchlets that are a quite spiny and often without phyllodes. Like most species it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The ascending to erect phyllodes have a narrowly oblong shape and are usually straight or shallowly sigmoid.
The prostrate shrub typically grows to a height of and has red-brown coloured angular branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen, glabrous phyllodes have a tetragonous-terete cross-section and are in length and wide. The phyllodes are made up of overlapping scaly lobes and have one dominant nerve at each angle with a total of 8 to 12 nerves.
Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The dull, green to blue-green coloured phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to oblanceolate shape and can be straight or shallowly sickly shaped with a length of and a width of . The glabrous or slightly hairy phyllodes are coriaceous and often slightly resinous with fine parallel longitudinal nerves. The plant blooms between May and August producing yellow flowers.
The light gren phyllodes are sparsely hairy when young and have a subprominent midvein.
The erect viscid shrub typically grows to a height of . It has obscurely ribbed, terete branchlets. The thin, evergreen phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic shape that can be shallowly recurved. The phyllodes have a length of and that dry to a light brown.
Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. Th smooth green and glabrous phyllodes are in length and wide with an asymmetrical elliptic to obtriangular shape ending with a rigid, pungent, straight, brown point with a length of .
The shrub is prickly with a dense and bushy habit typically growing to a height of . It has glabrous branchlets and phyllodes. The sessile phyllodes are decurrent on branchlets. They are rigid, erect, straight and terete to slightly rhombic in cross-section.
The phyllodes are straight to slightly recurved with a length of and a width of and pungent with three main nerves. The phyllodes change colour to a purple red colour in times of drought and revert to the regular colour following rains.
The specific epithet is in reference to the long narrow phyllodes of this particular species.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has a bushy, rounded and obconic habit. It has sub-glabrous branchlets and phyllodes that run continuously along with the branchlets. The sub-rigid, ascending to erect evergreen phyllodes are in length and have a diameter of . The phyllodes are generally shallowly incurved and green in colour but turn grey once they die, they have eight longitudinal nerves with deep grooves between the nerves.
The rounded spreading and dense shrub or tree typically grows to a height of and has glabrous and terete branchlets with densely hairy yellow coloured new shoots. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than new leaves. The glabrescent green phyllodes are patent to ascending with a filiform shape that is straight to slightly curved. The phyllodes are in length and have a diameter of and have many closely parallel, fine nerves.
Like most Acacias it has phyllode s rather than true leaves. The phyllodes have a dimidiate to subfalcate shape and are in length and wide and are glaucous with a slight sheen. The phyllodes have numerous parallel longitudinal nerves. It blooms between January and June.
The small spreading shrub typically grows to a height of . It blooms in May and produces yellow flowers. The phyllodes are arranged in whorls each with 10 to 14 phyllodes. Each phyllode is slightly flattened and straight or slightly recurved and from in length.
The shrub typically grows to a height of with glabrous slender branchlets that have a dark red colour. The thin green straight to incurved phyllodes have a narrowly linear shape. The phyllodes have a length of and a width of with an obscure midrib.
They are arranged in whorls containing 14 to 18 erect evergreen phyllodes. The adaxially flattened phyllodes are in length and covered in soft ascending to spreading white hairs. It blooms in May and produces yellow flowers. The spherical flower-heads contain 15 to 20 flowers.
The dense and erect shrub typically grows to a height of . The sericeous branchlets have resinous ribs. Like many species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The ascending or spreading phyllodes are shallowly to moderately incurved and quadrangular in cross section.
The prostrate and domed shrub typically grows to a height of . The branchlets are a scurfy white colour with inconspicuous stipules. The phyllodes are an obovate to obtriangular-obdeltate shape and mostly long and wide. The green phyllodes are glabrous or hairy on their margins.
The chartaceous to thinly coriaceous, light olive- green and glabrous phyllodes have a very narrowly oblanceolate or elliptic shape and are straight or slightly curved. The phyllodes have a length of and a width of and have yellowish nerves, with four prominent longitudinal nerves.
The erect shrub typically grows to a height of and can have a compact to open habit. It has glabrous and occasionally resinous. Like many species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The crowded and evergreen phyllodes are erect or ascending.
The phyllodes have a length of in length and wide with a fine, curved, innocuous point.
The tree or shrub typically grows to a height of . It has glabrous branchlets that are hairy in the axils. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes are ascending to erect with a straight to shallowly incurved shape.
The bushy and open shrub typically grows to a height of . The glabrous branchlets support patent to inclined phyllodes that have an oblanceolate shape and are slightly recurved. The thin green phyllodes are in length and wide. It blooms from August to September and produces yellow flowers.
The wattle grows as a spreading shrub typically to height of . It has ribbed branchlets. The green, linear, straight phyllodes are narrowed into a long curved mucro. The phyllodes usually have a length of and a width of with sparse hairs and with no obvious nerves.
The harsh, diffuse and intricate shrub typically grows to a height of . The terminal branchlets are sometimes coarsely spiny with long stipules. The phyllodes occur in clusters of up seven. The phyllodes have a linear to linear- oblanceolate shape with a length of and a width of .
The spreading shrub typically grows to a height of . It has apically resin-ribbed branchlets that are sericeous between the glabrous ribs. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes are straight with a terete or quadrangular-terete shape.
The shrub typically grows to a height of . It has branchlets that are sericeous between the glabrous and resinous ribbing. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The phyllodes have a linear to compressed- rhombic shape and are flat or sometimes terete.
The shrub or tree an erect or spreading habit, growing up to high and it has pendulous and slender branchlets with pubescent ribs. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves The phyllodes are up to in length and wide. The thin dark green phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to lanceolate shape with two to three distinct nerves per face. The globular pale-yellow flowerheads appear in the leaf axils in October (in Australia).
The shrub or tree typically grows to a height of . It has glabrous, dark reddish branchlets that are angled at the extremities. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves, the phyllodes are usually ascending to erect and have a narrowly oblanceolate to narrowly elliptic or linear shape that is straight or shallowly incurved. The thin, glabrous and moderately coriaceous phyllodes are in length and wide have a distinct midrib and marginal nerves.
The tree or shrub typically grows to a height of and has a bushy habit and glabrous branchlets that are angled at the extremities. Like ost species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The thin, evergreen phyllodes are situated on raised stem-projections and have an oblong to narrowly elliptic to narrowly oblanceolate shape. The phyllodes have a length of around and a width of with one nerve per face and obscure lateral nerves.
Acacia argyrodendron is a tree, reaching high, and has dark grey to black bark. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The ascending and evergreen phyllodes have a narrowly linear-elliptic shape and are straight or sometimes a little recurved. The leathery glabrous to subglabrous phyllodes are in length and wide and have many closely parallel nerves where one to three of the nerves are far more prominent than the others.
The usually terete phyllodes have a length of and a diameter of with many obscure longitudinal nerves.
The small shrub grows to a height of around and has a decumbent habit. The terete and hairy branchlets have subulate stipules with a length of around . Like most Acacias it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The narrowly elliptic to linear shaped phyllodes are straight to slightly curved.
The evergreen, grey to blue-green phyllodes have a linear to narrowly lanceolate or narrowly elliptic shape and are commonly curved. The phyllodes are in length and wide and have two to four primary veins and obscure secondary veins. It blooms between October and January producing golden flowers.
The evergreen, erect and terete phyllodes have a length of and a diameter of . The phyllodes are densely haired when immature that soon become glabrescent or hairs persisting in grooves between the many thin parallel nerves. It blooms from July to August and produces yellow flowers and yellow fruit.
Phyllodes tumor in mammography Anatomopathological results of phyllodes tumor. This is predominantly a tumor of adult women, with very few examples reported in adolescents. Patients typically present with a firm, palpable mass. These tumors are very fast-growing, and can increase in size in just a few weeks.
The slender shrub typically grows to a height of . The resinous and angled branchlets have small white hairs between the angles. The ascending, linear, straight to slightly curved green phyllodes have a length of and a width of . The phyllodes have a central nerve and broader marginal nerves.
The pungent, greyish green phyllodes are slightly inequilateral with a narrowly elliptic to straight or shallowly incurved shape. Phyllodes are in length with a width of long. The inflorescences are two to four headed. The prolific, showy, globular heads contain 7 to 12 loosely grouped bright golden flowers.
The rounded shrub or tree typically grows to a height of and has glabrous branchlets. The green to grey-green, glabrous, terete phyllodes have a narrowly linear, straight to shallowly incurved flat shape. The phyllodes are in length and wide. It blooms between August and September producing yellow flowers.
The weeping tree typically grows to a height of with minni ritchi peeling bark. It has densely haired branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes have a filiform shape and are substraight to shallowly incurved and terete to compressed.
The phyllodes ("leaves") and stems make fawn dye with alum as a mordant. The phyllodes also have medicinal properties and were also substituted as hop to flavour beer. Supposedly early European settlers used the leaves as a drug to expel intestinal worms, the phyllodes were also decocted to be consumed to expel hydatid cysts and also as tonic. Although not widely cultivated it can serve as decorative addition to one’s garden due to the visually appealing foliage and the fragrant flowers.
The pungent shrub typically grows to a height of and has an open and spreading habit with sparely pilose and hairy branchlet with pungent stipules that are in length. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The pungent, glabrous and evergreen phyllodes have an obtrinagular to obdeltate to shallowly obtriangular shape that are contiguous with the branchlet. The phyllodes have a length of and a width of and have a midrib near the abaxial margin.
The specific epithet is a reference to the approximate tetragonus shape of the cross section of the phyllodes.
Page 739 in: 8th edition. Phyllodes tumor is a fibroepithelial tumor which can either benign, borderline or malignant.
The phyllodes are not rigid and have a length of and a width of with many longitudinal nerves.
The tree typically grows to a maximum height of . It has reddish coloured and sharply angular branchlets that are resinous when the tree is young. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes are slightly sickle shaped and taper equally to each end.
The tree can grow to a height of up and forms a dense canopy. It has flexuose and pendulous branchlets that are glabrous. The light green phyllodes have a narrowly oblong to narrowly elliptic shape. The phyllodes have a length of and a width of with prominent midribs and marginal nerves.
The shrub typically growing to a height of but can reach as high as . It has light grey bark and flattened branches towards the apices. The coriaceous and rigid phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic shape and are often oblique. Phyllodes are in length and wide usually with three prominent longitudinal nerves.
The openly branched to weeping tree or shrub typically grows to a height of . It has pendulous, flexuose and ribbed branchlets that are sericeous between the ribs. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves . The sessile phyllodes are strongly incurved with a quadrangular cross-section.
The shrub typically grows to a height of . It has glabrous ash-grey, coloured branchlets. the ascending to erect dull to shiny green phyllodes have a linear to narrowly oblong-elliptic or oblanceolate shape. The phyllodes have a length of and a width of and are narrowed at the base.
Acacia ammophila is a tree growing to 6 m. Its dark grey bark is furrowed. The phyllodes are linear and 10–20 cm long by 2.5–6 mm wide and acute with a dense silvery appressed covering which is sparse on the older phyllodes. There are numerous closely parallel obscure nerves.
The rounded spreading shrub can grow to a height of . The sericeous branchlets have red-brown or yellow-brown resin-ribs at the extremities. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen shallowly to strongly incurved phyllodes occasionally curl back to a full circle.
The evergreen asymmetrical phyllodes have an obliquely ovate-rhomboid to suborbicular shape with a length of and a width of . The phyllodes can have a setose point at the apex and have three to four prominent, curved nerves. It blooms from January to April or June to September producing yellow flowers.
It has dull green phyllodes that are long and slender with a length of and a diameter of around .
Other threats include, goats and kangaroos who strip the phyllodes and cattle that shade by trees thereby destabilising soils.
Acacia willdenowiana has phyllodes resembling those of A. pterocaulon. It is also similar to the closely related Acacia glaucoptera.
The phyllodes are in length and with two or three prominent main nerves and two or three secondary nerves.
As inflammatory breast cancer does not present as a lump there can sometimes be a delay in diagnosis. In rare cases, what initially appears as a fibroadenoma (hard, movable non- cancerous lump) could in fact be a phyllodes tumor. Phyllodes tumors are formed within the stroma (connective tissue) of the breast and contain glandular as well as stromal tissue. Phyllodes tumors are not staged in the usual sense; they are classified on the basis of their appearance under the microscope as benign, borderline or malignant.
The prickly shrub grows to a height of and has a width of around with a dense habit. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The dark green, rigid and sharp-pointed phyllodes have three or four prominent longitudinal veins. The bright yellow to pale yellow cylindrical flowerheads appear in groups of one to three in the axils of the phyllodes from July to October, followed by straight or slightly curved seed pods which are 4 to long and wide.
It grows to between high and had phyllodes up to long and wide. The yellow globular flowerheads arise from the leaf axils in groups of two or singly. The shrub has a dense and spreading habit with glabrous branches that appear somewhat willowy. The strongly acutely angled branchlets are ribbed below the phyllodes.
The dense rounded shrub or tree typically grows to a height of . The slightly angular and glabrous branchlets are sometimes resinous. The pungent green phyllodes are ascending to erect and slightly incurved. The phyllodes have a length of and a diameter of and have eight closely parallel nerves separated by deep furrows.
The intricate and pungent shrub typically grows to a height of . It has spinose and glabrous branchlets that are rigid and striate-ribbed and caducous stipules. The sessile and patent, rigid, green phyllodes have an inequilaterally triangular-lanceolate to semi-trullate shape. The phyllodes have a length of and a width of .
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has a glabrous and spreading habit. It has acutely angled branchlets that are ribbed below phyllodes. Like many species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. These appear on stem-projections and are patent to erect but usually inclined to ascending.
The erect sometimes spindly tree or shrub typically grows to a height of . It has stout and prominently angled branchlets and has silvery sericeous new shoots. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen, ascending to erect, grey-green coloured phyllodes have an obliquely narrowly elliptic shape.
The bushy shrub typically grows to a height of . It has glabrous branchlets and has citron golden-sericeous new growth. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The patent to reflexed evergreen phyllodes have a linear-elliptic to linear-oblanceolate shape and can be straight to shallowly incurved.
The shrub typically grows to a height of about and has a spreading habit. It has glabrous, terete dark greyish brown branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The glabrous, pungent and subrigid phyllodes are flat and curved to straight with a linear to narrowly oblanceolate shape.
The shrub typically grows to a height of . It is glabrous branchlets has caducous stipules and can have minute hairs often found within the phyllode axils. The green to green phyllodes have a linear to oblanceolate shape and are straight to incurved. The phyllodes have a length of and a width of .
The low spreading shrub typically grows to a height of and a width of . It has hairy, slender, dark grey coloured branchlets with setaceous recurved stipules that are in length. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The glabrous, dark green phyllodes are crowded on the branchlets.
The phyllodes resemble the branchlets and have a narrowly linear to linear- elliptic shape and are narrowed at both ends. The straight or shallowly incurved phyllodes have a length of and a width of with a prominent midrib and five main nerves. It blooms from June to September and produces yellow flowers.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a maximum height of . It has hairy ribbed branchlets with resinous young shoots. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes have silvery coloured hairs and a narrowly elliptic to lanceolate shape that can be straight or shallowly curved.
The loose shrub typically grows to a height of and has a spreading arching habit. It has terete villous branchlets that are fawn to red-brown in colour. Like many species of Acacia it has phyllodes instead of true leaves. The evergreen linear shaped phyllodes are in length and that are sparsely villous.
The phyllodes are in length and wide and have a slightly impressed midvein. It mostly blooms between August and October.
It grows as a shrub or tree, up to ten metres high. It has blue-grey phyllodes and yellow flowers.
Acacia malloclada is a shrub belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Juliflorae that is native to northern Australia. The shrub has a slender habit and has hairy and angular branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. It has stiff, linear, flat, straight to slightly curved evergreen phyllodes.
The rounded and prickly shrub typically grows to a height of . It has spiny glabrous branchlets with caducous stipules. The pungent, rigid and green phyllodes are patent to ascending The phyllodes has a length of and a width of around with an indistinct midrib. It blooms from June to September and produces yellow flowers.
Acacia alata is a frost- hardy, large, multi-branched shrub, typically growing to a height of and across. Its branchlets are often bent alternately in different directions. The phyllodes (modified petioles) are reduced in size and give the impression of cladodes (branches that resemble leaves). The wings of these phyllodes are usually wide and long.
The shrub typically grows to a height of around and has a bushy habit. It has glabrous branchlets that are angled at the extremities. The ascending to erect, grey-green phyllodes are flat with a narrowly linear shape and are straight or slightly curved. The phyllodes are around in length and have a width of .
It grows as a shrub or tree up to in height. It has blue-grey phyllodes, and yellow flowers from September to October. The branchlets are covered with small white hairs have resinous red-brown coloured ribs with red hairs on new growth. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The rigid spreading domed shrub typically grows to a height of . It has glabrous branchlets with sessile, rigid and glabrous phyllodes which have a straight to recurved shape. The phyllodes are terete to subterete with a length of around and a diameter of about . It blooms from September to October and produces yellow flowers.
The light green phyllodes have a narrowly oblong to oblanceolate shape that is undulate or spirally twisted. The hairy phyllodes have a length of and a width of and are narrower toward the base. They have six to eight longitudinal nerves with one prominent midnerve. It blooms between March and August producing golden flowers.
The shrub typically grows to a height of around and has a spreading habit. It has yellow resinous ribbing on the branchlets that are covered in small white hairs. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The terete to subterete evergreen phyllodes are sometimes flat, straight or slightly curved.
The dense shrub typically grows to a height of and has a rounded habit. The straight and erect phyllodes are patent to erect. The phyllodes are in length with a diameter of . It blooms from July to October producing simple inflorescences with globular heads with a diameter of containing 10 to 25 yellow flowers.
The straight and narrowly elliptic to oblong-elliptic shaped phyllodes with a length of and a width of . The semi-pungent phyllodes are thinly-coriaceous and have three distant raised main nerves with many parallel secondary nerves. It blooms from April to June and produces yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences occur singly in the axils.
Sandpaper wattle grows as a spindly shrub with an open habit from high and wide. Young stems are rough and warty, as are the dark green phyllodes. Like other wattles, its leaf-like structures are actually enlarged and flattened petioles known as phyllodes. These are irregularly oval in shape, long and wide and prominently veined.
The shrub typically grows to a height of or a small tree typically grows to a maximum height of and sometimes as high as It has grey-brown fissured bark and slender branchlets that are angled at the extremities. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The glabrous pale green to dark grey green phyllodes are dimidiate and curved like a sickle with a length of and a width of . The phyllodes have many parallel longitudinal nerves with four to seven per millimetre.
It has glabrous branchlets that can have indumentum covered in dried resin at the angled extremities. Like many species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen, cariaceous and sub-rigid, narrowly elliptic to narrowly oblong and sometimes linear shaped phyllodes have a length of and a width of . The ascending to erect, dull green to grey-green phyllodes are straight to shallowly sickle shaped are glabrous or sparsely haired with many fine longitudinal nerves that are very close together with a central nerve than can be more prominent than the others.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a height of and has a rounded and resinous habit but can have a prostrate habit in exposed coastal locales. The smooth or flaky bark can be grey to brown in colour and it has angular branchlets with reddish brown granules. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to narrowly oblanceolate shape and can be straight or curved The hoary or glabrous, chartaceous to subcoriaceous phyllodes have a length of and a width of .
Acacia fasciculifera seedling in the transitional stage between pinnate leaves and phyllodes The leaves of acacias are compound pinnate in general. In some species, however, more especially in the Australian and Pacific Islands species, the leaflets are suppressed, and the leaf-stalks (petioles) become vertically flattened in order to serve the purpose of leaves. These are known as "phyllodes". The vertical orientation of the phyllodes protects them from intense sunlight since with their edges towards the sky and earth they do not intercept light as fully as horizontally placed leaves.
The multi-branched obconic shrub typically grows to a height of . It is intricately branched with modeartely sized ribs with caducous hairs and long stipules with thickened bases and maroon red or dull brown coloured new shoots. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The grey-green to blue-green coriaceous phyllodes are wide spreading, usually with a narrowly oblong to oblong-elliptic shape and a coarsely pungent tip The shallowly recurved phyllodes are in length and wide and have a prominent yellowish midrib.
The spindly, open and viscid shrub typically grows to a height of . It is sparingly branched with glabrous branchlets that become roughened by stem-projections the once held the phyllodes in place and setaceous stipules with a elngth of in length.. Like most species of Acacia it has pyllodes rather than true leaves. The tick and evergreen phyllodes are crowded on the branchlets and are patent to erect. The phyllodes have a linear shape and are straight to shallowly curved with a length of and a width of with a resinous midrib and abaxial nerves.
The glabrous shrub or tree typically grows to a height of but can be as high as and has corky, deeply furrowed gery coloured bark. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The green to grey-green to blue-green leathery textured phyllodes have an inequilaterally obovate-elliptic to duck's head shape and are broadest above the middle with a conspicuously rounded upper margin and a straight lower margin. The phyllodes are usually in length and wide with three to eight main longitudinal nerves with anastomosing minor nerves.
Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The silvery grey-green phyllodes are found in clumps at the end of the branchlets and have a long narrowly linear and strap-like appearance. They are flat with a length of and a width of and is somewhat somewhat rigid with a leathery texture. The spreading to erect phyllodes are straight or recurved and densely covered in fine silky hair when young but becoming sub-glabrous as they age with many parallel, fine longitudinal nerves that are equally prominent.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a maximum height of and has dark red coloured minni ritchi style bark. It has angular branchlets with slightly hairy ridges. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes have a linear shape that tapers slightly towards the base and can be slightly curved.
The shrub typically grows to a height of but can be as tall as . It has slender branchlets that are arching or pendulous at the extremities. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The flat, evergreen phyllodes are scattered with a linear to narrowly elliptic shape with a length of and a width of .
The shrub or small tree typically grows to a height of around and has an upright and open habit.ref name=anps/> with hairy, yellow-ribbed angular branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The glabrous, thinly coriaceous and evergreen phyllodes have a narrowly linear or occasionally linear-oblanceolate shape are usually mostly incurved.
The dense glabrous shrub typically grows to a height of . It has slender, glabrous yellowish brown to grey branchlets with green to grey green phyllodes. The erect and filiform phyllodes have a length of and a width of around . They have a prominent midrib which becomes angled with three ot four distinct longitudinal ridges when dry.
The slender, straggly, weeping tree or shrub typically grows to a height of . The pendulous or arching branchlets are often covered in a fine white powder. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes usually have a pendulous forn with a linear to linear-elliptic shape and are straight to slightly curved.
The bushy, rounded shrub typically grows to a height of . It has glabrous and resin-ribbed branchlets that are angled towards the apices. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen slightly asymmetric phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to oblong-elliptic shape and a length of and a width of .
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has an erect or weeping or spreading habit. The puberulous branchlets have stipules that are in length. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes appear crowded and are mostly ascending to erect with an asymmetrically ovate to elliptic shape.
The slightly viscid shrub typically grows to a height of and has an erect habit with many branches. The densely woolly yellow to white haired branchlets have setose stipules with a length of . Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes occur in crowded whorls of 9 to 15.
The multi-stemmed spreading and pungent shrub typically grows to a height of . The puberulous to pubescent branchlets have linear-triangular shaped stipules with a length of . The rigid, green, flat and linear phyllodes have a length of and a width of also have a pungent apex. The phyllodes have five nerves and a prominently raised midrib.
The open pendulous shrub typically grows to a height of . It has slightly ridged densely hairy branchlets that become terete. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes are quite crowded and have a circular to broadly elliptic or obovate shape with a length of and a width of .
The glabrous shrub typically grows to a height of with branchlets that are angled at the extremities. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The linear to incurved, evergreen phyllodes have a length of and a width of . They are thick, flat and smooth but become finely longitudinally rugulose as they dry.
The obconic shrub or tree typically grows to a height of and has a bushy domed crown. The green linear lanceolate shaped phyllodes have a length of up to and a width of . The glabrous and shiny phyllodes are narrowed towards the base and have a prominent central vein. It blooms between May and November producing yellow flowers.
The spreading multi-stemmed shrub typically grows to a height of and a width of around . The glabrous branchlets are commonly sericeous at the extremities. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The patent to ascending phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to oblong- elliptic shape and are straight or shallowly curved.
The low prostrate shrub has many small branches sprouting from subterranean rootstock. The glabrous, green to brown , virgate and angular branchlets often have resin-crenulated ridges. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes have a linear shape and are quite flat and straight with a length of and a width of .
The tree can grow to a height of , but more often it grows as a large shrub.Association of Societies for Growing Australian Plants (ASGAP) It has glabrous, flexuose, flattened and narrowly winged branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than trues leaves. The evergreen phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic shape and are in length and wide.
The dome shaped shrub typically grows to a height of . It has decumbent and hairy branchlets with persistent, setaceous and recurved stipules with a length of . Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The crowded and grey-green and glabrous phyllodes are found on raised stem-projections and are patent to erect.
The intricate and prickly shrub typically grows to a height of . It has hairy, rigid and pungent branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The sessile and evergreen phyllodes have a variable and inequilateral shape that is usually obtriangular to obdeltate with a length of and a width of and a prominent midrib.
The slender, yellow to light brown coloured branchelt have bright green new shoots. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The soft, flexible, thin, dull green and sometimes scurfy phyllodes have a linear shape with a length of and a width of . It blooms from May to July and produces yellow flowers.
The spreading to erect spinescent shrub typically grows to a height of . It has short, straight, slender, ascending to inclined glabrous branchlets that taper to a rigid and sharp point. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen and erect phyllodes have a linear to narrowly oblong shape and are horizontally flattened.
The diffuse, straggly and pungent shrub typically grows to a height of . It has spiny branchlets that are covered in small woolly hairs with caducous stipules. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The rigid and pungent, patent to erect phyllodes are in length and and have one to three nerves per face.
The erect shrub typically grows to a height of . The glabrous shrub has resinous and slightly viscid new growth. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes are inclined to erect and incurved to more or less straight with a length of and a width of with four impressed brownish nerves.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has a dense and intricate habit. It has glabrous with persistent and spinose stipules with a length of . Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen, sessile phyllodes that are usually continuous with the branchlets have a length of and a diameter of .
The rigid spreading prickly shrub typically grows to a height of . The branchlets are glabrous to sparsely haired and have scarring where phyllodes have detached. The pungent, rigid, glabrous phyllodes are sessile and are found on distinct, yellow stem-projections. Each phyllode has a straight to curved shape and are usually in length with a width of .
The compact dense shrub typically grows to a height of . It has branchlets that are covered in golden or white coloured hairs on young growth. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The grey-green coloured phyllodes are crowded at the ends of the branchlets and have a linear to linear-oblanceolate shape.
The shrub typically grows to a maximum height of and has fibrous brown coloured bark. It has angled to almost flattened glabrous branchlets with resinous crenulated ridges. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes have an oblanceolate to narrowly elliptic shape and are flat and straight to slightly curved.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has an open broom-like habit. It has glabrous, striated, terete green branchlets that have prominent yellow ribbing with narrowly triangular stipules that are in length. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The few evergreen phyllodes are distantly spaced and continuous with the branches.
The phyllodes can be in length and in width with numerous longitudinal nerves. It can bloom at any time of year but mostly between March and July and October and November producing yellow flowers. Each simple inflorescences occurs in pairs at the axil of the phyllodes. The flowers-spikes are in length densely packed with golden flowers.
The grey-green coloured phyllodes have an asymmetrically lanceolate to narrowly elliptic shape and are widest below the middle. The phyllodes have a length of and a width of and are straight to shallowly recurved and can be slightly undulate with fine numerous parallel longitudinal nerves numerous. It blooms between July and August producing yellow to pink coloured flowers.
The phyllodes have a linear or narrowly elliptic shape and are flat and straight or slightly curved. The thinly coriaceous and stiff phyllodes are in length and in width and have many stomates with two obvious main acentral nerves. It blooms from May to July producing yellow flowers. The cylindrical flower-spikes have a length of .
The spindly tree or shrub typically grows to a height of . It has smooth, red-brown or grey coloured bark and angular olive- green to brown branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen flat phyllodes have an elliptic or oblanceolate shape with a length of and a width of .
The shrub typically grows to a height of and a width of and has a moderately open habit. It has glossy green phyllodes with an oblanceolate shape and are slightly sticky. The ascending to erect phyllodes are straight to shallowly incurved with a length of and a width of . It blooms from August to October and produces yellow flowers.
The shrub is typically grows to a height of . It has glabrous and resinous branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen and ascending phyllodes have a coarsely filiform shape are curved to shallowly sinuous with a length of and a diameter of around with eight distant, obscure and resinous veins.
The phyllodes have a length of but can be as long as and have a width of and narrow to the apex.
The specific epithet is in reference to the undulate phyllodes, which is particularly noticeable on new growth. The plant resembles Acacia piligera.
Lambula phyllodes is a moth of the family Erebidae. It was described by Edward Meyrick in 1886. It is found in Australia.
The species epithet, equisetifolia, alludes to the similarity of the phyllodes in their shape and arrangement to species of the genus, Equisetum L..
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has minni ritchi style bark and flattened and angular ribbed branchlets that glabrous or sparsely hairy on ribs and are sometimes coated with a white powdery coating. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. Thee evergreen phyllodes have a linear or linear-oblanceolate shape and can be either straight or curved. The glabrous, flexible or semi-rigid phyllodes have a length of and a width of with an acute to acuminate apex and have three to seven raised nerves on each face.
The glabrous shrub has an erect habit and typically grows to a height of around . It has angled to flattened brownish grey coloured branchlets that are resin ribbed. The dull green phyllodes become greyish with age. The phyllodes have an elliptic to ovate-elliptic shape with a length of and a width of and have four to seven longitudinal nerves.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a height of and produces yellow flowers. The branchlets flattened near the tips and are sparsely haired to glabrous and occasionally white-resinous. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The thinly coriaceous evergreen phyllodes are erect with a linear shape and length of and a width of .
The common treatment for phyllodes is wide local excision. Other than surgery, there is no cure for phyllodes, as chemotherapy and radiation therapy are not effective. The risk of developing local recurrence or metastases is related to the histologic grade, according to the above-named features. Despite wide excision, a very high percentage of surgeries yielded incomplete excision margins that required revision surgery.
The spreading, multi-stemmed and prickly shrub typically grows to a height of and a width of around . The pubescent to hirsute branchlets have slender stipules. The ascending to erect, rigid green phyllodes are straight to recurved and have a narrowly oblong shape. The phyllodes are in length and and are asymmetrically narrowed toward the base and have four main nerves in total.
The spreading and prickly shrub typically grows to a height of . It has glabrous to subglabrous branchlets with a light grey coloured epidermis and spinose long stipules. The sessile, patent, rigid green phyllodes have a slightly inequilaterally narrowly oblong to narrowly oblong-elliptic or lanceolate shape that is sometimes linear. The phyllodes are in length and wide with a prominent midrib.
The shrub or small tree typically grows to a height of and sometimes as high as with an erect or spreading habit. It has smooth grey or brown bark and angled branchlets. Like most Acacias it has phyllodes instead of true leaves. The phyllodes have a length and a width of with a narrowly elliptic to linear shape that is straight or curved.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has compact, rounded and spreading habit. It has sparsely hairy branchlets that branch off near ground level forming a number of ascending stems . The flat, green, terete phyllodes have a linear shape and can be straight or incurved. The phyllodes have a length of and a width of and have six brownish nerves.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a height of and has a bushy habit and pendulous young branchlets with reddish coloured new growth. It has acutely angled, dark red, glabrous brnachlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The thin grey-green phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to lanceolate shape and are straight to shallowly falcate.
The bushy erect shrub typically grows to a height of and width of around and has a dense low-spreading habit. It has glabrous or minutely haired and straight to flexuose ribbed branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The erect and flat evergreen phyllodes have a narrowly linear shape but can be curved or serpentinous.
The rounded to obconic shrub typically grows to a height of . The single stemmed and multi-branched plant has minni-ritchi bark and branchlets that have spreading hairs. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The patent to ascending evergreen phyllodes are terete to flat with a linear to linear-oblanceolate shape that is slightly to moderately incurved.
The shrub has a dense spreading habit and typically grows to a height of less than . It has ribbed, red to brown coloured branchlets that are asperulate. The pungent, rigid, glabrous, green phyllodes are subsessile and patent to inclined. The phyllodes are straight to shallowly recurved and have a length of and a width of and have 10 to 12 distant raised nerves.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has an erect or spreading habit. It has smooth grey coloured bark with angled to terete branchlets that are densely haired. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The whorled or clustered evergreen phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to narrowly oblanceolate shape and are straight to slightly curved.
The erect, slender and pungent shrub typically grows to a height of . It has glabrous to sparsely haired and yellow-ribbed branchlets. Like most species of Acacis it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The pungent and g;abrous, evergreen phyllodes have an inequilateral and obtriangular shape that are in length and a width of with a midrib near the abaxial margin.
The shrub typically grows to in height and has an erect to spreading habit. It has angled reddish to brown branchlets that are appressed-hairy when young and becoming glabrescent with age. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. It has variable foliage and the phyllodes are generally thin with a narrowly elliptic to oblanceolate or obovate shape.
The spreading and prickly shrub typically grows to a height of that has glabrous branches with light grey coloured bark. The coarsely pungent branchlets are rigid, terete and have no ribbing. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The pungent, rigid and green phyllodes are mostly patent with a length if and a diameter of about .
The shrub typically grows to a height of . The glabrous and angular branchlets have caducous stipules. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The ascending to erect and dull grey-green to bluish coloured phyllodes have a narrowly oblong shape with a length of and a width of with an inconspicuous midrib and no lateral nerves.
The prostrate spinescent shrub typically grows to a height of . It normally has glabrous branchlets that are often covered with a white powdery coating and have spinose stipules with a length of . Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes have an ovate to narrowly elliptic shape with a length of and a width of .
The spreading prostrate shrub typically grows to a height of with a sprawling habit. The multistemmed shrub has quite slender branches with a length of up to It has glabrous or slightly hairy, green coloured branchlets that have fine yellow-coloured ribbing. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The sessile and evergreen phyllodes are pointing backwards.
The dense, spreading and pungent shrub typically grows to a height of with an intricate habit. It has glabrous branchlets with spinose stipules that are in length and widely spreading. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The pungent, evergreen and dimidiate phyllodes have a length of and a width of with a midrib that is not prominent.
The spreading pungent shrub typically grows to a height of and has a somewhat straggly habit. It has glabrous, straight and ascending branchlets that have striated ribbing that erminate with hard and rigid spiny points. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The glabrous, pungent and subrigid phyllodes are a grey-green to blue-green colour.
The glabrous shrub typically grows to a height of and has angled branchlets with insignificant stipules. The grey coloured bark on the trunk and main branches is finely fissured. The evergreen phyllodes usually have an oblanceolate to oblong-oblanceolate or elliptic-oblanceolate shape and are straight to slightly incurved. The smooth phyllodes are in length and have a width of .
The erect bushy pungent shrub typically grows to a height of and has an obconic habit. It has smooth, light-grey coloured bark and slightly ribbed and sparsely haired branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergeen ascending to erect phyllodes have a narrowly oblanceolate to elliptic- oblanceolate shape and can be straight to slightly curved.
The prickly shrub typically grows to a height of and has a dense or obconic habit. It has glabrous or sparsely haired branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The glabrous leathery and evergreen phyllodes are patent to erect with a narrowly oblong oblanceolate, linear or linear-oblanceolate shape and are straight to slightly curved.
The prickly shrub typically grows to a height of and can have an erect or sprawling habit. It has hairy and terete branchlets with persistent stipules that are up to in length. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreeen, sessile to subsessile phyllodes can be patent to inclined with an inequilaterally ovate to lanceolate shape.
The dense rounded shrub typically grows to a height of . It has hairy and slightly ribbed branchelts that have persistent stipules with a length of .Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The leathery, dull green to grey-green, erect to ascending phyllodes have an oblanceolate to linear-oblanceolate shape and can be straight to shallowly incurved.
The many-branched shrub typically grows to a height of and has an erect or spreading habit. It has small persistent stipules that are less than in length along the branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen flat and linear phyllodes have a length of and a width of and have a pungent-pointed apex.
The evergreen, coriaceous, scurfy and glabrous phyllodes are flat and have a linear shape that is straight to shallowly incurved. The narrow blue- grey-green coloured phyllodes have a length of and a width of and have an inconspicuous, parallel midvein. It blooms between August producing golden flowers. The racemose inflorescences produce flower-spikes with a length of bearing golden flowers.
The evergreen, coriaceous and mostly glabrous phyllodes have a lanceolate or narrowly ovate shape and are narrowed at both ends. The phyllodes are flat and sickle shaped with a length of and a width of with three prominent nerves. It blooms between June and July producing golden flowers. The cylindrical flower-spikes have a length of and are covered in golden flower.
The shrub has many branches and typically grows to in height. The stems are mostly straight but can zig-zag with branches that are terete or angled. The phyllodes are continuous with the stems, sometimes decurrent and forming narrow wings at base of stems. Phyllodes are green, rigid, flat to pentagonal or terete, long, shallowly recurved to straight and glabrous.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has a spreading habit that can be flat-topped. The glabrous and resinous branchlets with prominent ribbing. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The patent to ascending phyllodes usually have an ovate to elliptic or oblong-elliptic shape that straight to slightly recurved at the apices.
The dense shrub typically grows to a height of and sometimes as a tree to and blooms from July to November. It has sericeous, ribbed, glabeous branchlets. The grey-green ascending phyllodes are straight to shallowly incurved with a rhombic-terete shape. The pungent, rigid phyllodes are in length and with a diameter of and have 8 to 16 parallel quite broad nerves.
The shrub typically grows to a height of with a bushy, rounded or obconical habit. The ribbed and hoary branchlets are often covered in scale or scurf. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The coriaceous, silvery grey-green phyllodes have an oblanceolate to oblong or elliptical shape with a length of and a width of .
The shrub typically grows to a height of and had a rounded, obconic habit. The glabrous branchlets are sericeous between the ribs and towards the apices. The green to grey-green coloured glabrous phyllodes are soft and flexible. The pungent phyllodes have a length of and a diameter of and has eight broad nerves that are separated by narrow furrows.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a height of . It has terete branchlets that can be glabrous or covered with fine downy hairs. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen, ascending to erect phyllodes are straight or slightly curved with a length of and a diameter of or a width of when flat.
The shrub or tree is openly branched, slender and often weeping, it typically grows to a height of and has fissured grey coloured bark. The light to dark brown branchlets are terete and woolly. The crowded and erect phyllodes have a linear to narrowly lanceolate shape. the phyllodes are straight to slightly curved and in length with a width of .
The phyllodes are arranged singly or infrequently in twos or threes. The phyllodes have a linear to narrowly elliptic shape and are straight to slightly upcurved with a length of and a width of with a prominent midnerve. It blooms from December to June producing yellow flowers. The flower spikes occur in singly or in pairs at the phyllode axils.
The tree or shrub typically grows to a height of that has silvery sericeous branchlets and resinous new shoots. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen, ascending to suberect phyllodes are often linear-tetragonous in shape with a rhombic cross section. They are rigid with a pungent point and in length and wide.
The open viscid shrub typically grows to a height of and has finely ribbed hairy branchlets with persistent stipules. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The erect grey-green coloured phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic shape that is asymmetric with a length of and a width of . It blooms in June producing yellow flowers.
The specific epithet is taken from the Latin words calamus meaning reed and folium meaning leaf in reference to the shape of the phyllodes.
The glabrous phyllodes are straight to shallowly incurved and have three widely spaces longitudinal nerves. It flowers between March and June producing yellow flowers.
The mostly glabrous phyllodes have eight longitudinal nerves each of which is separated by a distinct, longitudinal groove. It blooms in December producing yellow flowers.
The evergreen glabrous phyllodes have a linear shape and are straight to slightly curved. The thinly coriaceous phyllodes have a length of and a width of with a midvein that is prominent and raised with one to two parallel less prominent veins on each side. It blooms around January producing pale yellow or golden flowers. The cylindrical shaped flower-spikes have a length of .
The single stemmed shrub typically grows to a maximum height of and has a spindly, viscid habit. It has grey coloured bark that is smooth and glabrous, scurfy angular branchlets that are a pale-yellow to tawny colour. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The glossy green, coriaceous and glabrous phyllodes are held rigidly erect on the branchlets.
The resinous shrub typically grows to a height of and has a dense to spreading habit. The sparsely to moderately hairy branchlets are commonly yellow-ribbed at their extremities. The green phyllodes have a linear or narrowly oblong-elliptic shape and can be incurved to shallowly sigmoid. The phyllodes often have a length of and a width of with two nerves per face when flat.
The slow spreading shrub typically grows to a height of and has a flat-topped habit. It has glabrous and resinous branchlets than can be sparsely haired at the ends. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The erect, terete or flat blue-green coloured phyllodes have a linear to narrowly oblong shape and are often mostly shallowly incurved.
It has narrowly-elliptic to narrowly-dimidiate shaped phyllodes that are straight with a length of and a width of . The coriaceous and sericeous phyllodes are grey-green; in colour and have many longitudinal nerves that are close together and three main longitudinal nerves. It blooms from August producing yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences occur singly or in pairs in the axils or are racemose.
The spindly erect shrub with small, viscid whorled leaves typically grows to a height of . The densely white-hispid stems have erect stipules with a length of . There are 15 to 20 slender straight phyllodes per whorl, the lower ones are erect and the upper ones are spreading to gently recurved. The phyllodes have a length of and they have an incurved length mucro.
The tree or shrub typically grows to a height of but can be as tall as and often has a bushy crown. The branchlets are usually glabrous but can have small hairs at the ribbed and resinous apices. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The grey-green and erect phyllodes have a linear shape and can be stright or incurved slightly.
The tree typically grows to a height of around with a habit that is similar in appearance to Acacia cana or Acacia cambagei. It has glabrous, flexuose, angled branchlets with no stipules. The straight to shallowly recurved pale-green phyllodes have a narrowly linear shape. The phyllodes have a length of and a width of and are narrowed at each end with a prominent midrib and nerves.
The resinous, glabrous shrub typically grows to a height of and has slender branchlets. The evergreen phyllodes are patent to erect and have a linear shape that can be shallowly incurved. The phyllodes have a length of and a width of and narrow toward the base and have a prominent midrib and margins. It produces simple inflorescences occurring singly or in pairs in the axils.
The tree or shrub typically grows to a height of up to . It has branchlets that are densely covered in soft, fine, silvery white and straight hairs set close against the surface and glabrous towards the extremities. Like many species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The thin, glabrous, evergreen phyllodes have a linear shape with a length of and a width of .
It has brittle, glabrous and grey coloured branches. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen, broadly linear to narrowly elliptic phyllodess have a length of and a width of . The thinly coriaceous phyllodes resemble a strap and are straight to curved and glabrous with one to five widely spaced main longitudinal nerves with many indistinct minor nerves.
The tree typically grows to a height of and has an erect and wispy habit. The glabrous branchlets are coated in a fine white powder and are angled at extremities. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes have an elliptic or obovate shape and a length of and a width of and have prominent marginal nerves and midrib.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a height of and has grey or brown coloured bark that is slightly fibrous. It has slightly angular ribbed branchlets that are covered by a dense matting of woolly hairs. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic shape with a length of and a width of .
The shrub typically grows to a height of but can be as tall as and has a spreading, straggly habit. It has slender and terete branchlets that are densely covered in fine soft hairs. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The phyllodes occur in clusters of two to eight at the more mature nodes but singly on new shoots.
The large shrub or tree up to tall and has a similar width, it has ribbed branchlets that are often arched downward. It is dense with foliage; the leaves are actually enlarged petioles known as phyllodes. They are crinkly and the new ones are covered in hairs. The erect phyllodes are asymettric and have a lanceolate shape and are around in length and wide.
The rounded shrub typically grows to a height of with some individuals reaching as high as the width of the plant is usually . The narrowly linear, green to grey-green, terete phyllodes have a length of and a width of . The phyllodes have a curved point, are glabrous and sometimes scurfy with four non-prominent nerves. It blooms between October and November producing yellow flowers.
Acacia prominens usually grows to a height of , sometimes to a height of . It has glabrous branchlets that are angled at the extremeties and has smooth grey coloured bark. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The grey-green to grey-blue, glabrous to sparsely hairy phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to narrowly oblong- elliptic shape and are more or less straight.
It has mid-grey to light grey coloured bark that is finely longitudinally fissured alongh the trunks and main branches becoming smooth of smaller branches. The green to grey-green phyllodes sometimes have a yellowish tinge. The phyllodes are long and linear with a length of and a width of . They are also straight to very shallowly incurved with numerous parallel longitudinal fine nerves.
The darker phyllodes are typically older and longer have a lanceolate leaf shape compared to the younger phyllodes which are much smaller in size and shape. The A. macradenia plant or tree can grow up to in height and spread. The branches are pendulous (loosely hanging) to subpendulous and flexuose (fully bending). The small yellow globular clusters are found at the stalk of the stem.
The tree or shrub typically grows to a height of and has smooth bark that is rougher at the base. The stout and angular branchlets are grey in colour and densely covered in silky hairs. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The flat and straight, elliptic to narrowly elliptic phyllodes have a length of and a width of and thinly coriaceous.
It grows up to 2 metres high and has phyllodes which measure 0.2 to 0.6 cm long and 1 to 2 mm wide. The phyllodes are straight, narrow- cuneate, slightly notched at the apex, and feature prominent midveins. Branchlets are terete, whitish and densely pubescent, As the branch grows it becomes glabrous and terminates in a rigid spinose point. The bark is grey, white or occasionally greenish.
The shrub or tree can grow to a height of with an erect to spreading habit and smooth grey to gery- brown bark that becomes fissured toward the base. It has dark-reddish glabrous branches that are sometimes scurfy. It has thin, smooth, glabrous, green to grey-green phyllodes with a narrowly linear shape. The phyllodes have a length of and a width of .
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has a sprawling habit. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen, patent to reclined phyllodes have a length of and a width of with a midrib that is slightly raised and quite distinct. When it blooms it produces simple inflorescences supported on glabrous to sparsely hairy peduncles that are in length.
The glabrous, coriaceous, flat and straight or slightly curved evergreen phyllodes have a semilunate shape with a length of and a width of . The grey-green phyllodes have two to five indistinct main veins with six to eight fine veins per millimetre. It blooms between June and September producing golden flowers. The cylindrical flower- spikes have a length of packed with golden coloured flowers.
It grows to between 1 and 4 metres high and has phyllodes that are 5 to 12.5 cm long and 1 to 2 mm wide. The bright yellow globular flowerheads appear singly or in groups of two in the axils of the phyllodes from September to November, followed by curved seed pods which are 5 to 9 cm long and 2 to 4 mm wide.
The evergreen phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to oblanceolate shape and can be slightly sickle-shaped. The coriaceous and often hairy phyllodes have a length of and a width of with one prominent midvein and 8 to 13 minor nerves per millimetre. It blooms between March and June producing golden flowers. The cylindrical flower-spikes are in length and densely packed with bright yellow flowers.
The harsh shrub typically grows to a height of . It has light grey to mid-grey coloured bark and glabrous to minutely hairy and rigid branchlets with persistent or caducous stipules that have a length of . Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The scattered, patent, linear or nearly lanceolate phyllodes form in whorls around the stem and have no stems.
The spreading upright shrub typically grows to a height of . It has densely hairy and terete branchlets that have persistent Stipules narrowly triangular stipules that are about in length. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen, ascending to erect phyllodes are straight to curved with a length of and a width of around with six to eight minutely villous nerves.
The dense rigid spreading shrub typically grows to a height of . It has ribbed and glabrous branchlets that are covered in a fine white powder at extremities with rigid, persistent and spiny stipules with a length of . Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes than true leaves. These Phyllodes are continuous along the length of the branchlets but not forming cauline wings and are strongly recurved.
The spreading shrub typically grows to a height of . It can have glabrous or sparsely finely haired branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The normally glabrous and thinly leathery evergreen phyllodes are inclined and more or less asymmetric with an oblong to oblong-elliptic shape and a length of and a width of and have two main distant longitudinal nerves.
The erect sparsely branched shrub typically grows to a height of and has a straggly habit. It has terete velvety-hairy branchlets with long stipules and golden-coloured hairy new shoots. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen, hairy and coriaceous phyllodes have an inequilaterally elliptic shape with a length of and have three to five raised main nerves.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has sparsely haired, resinous and ribbed branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The crowded, erect and evergreen phyllodes are sometimes subverticillate, terete and straight with a length of and a thickness of with an inconspicuous yellowish nerve on adaxial surfaces. It blooms between August and September producing yellow coloured flowers.
The shrub or tree can grow to a maximum height of about . It has flexuose and glabrous branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The thinly coriaceous and glabrous evergreen phyllodes are sickle shaped with a length of and a width of and are narrow at the base with one main nerve per face and no lateral nerves.
The shrub has an erect, intricate and multi-branched habit and typically grows to a height of around . It has terete and tortuous branchlets that are striated and green or brown in colour. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The rudimentary phyllodes appear as small continuous terete horn-like projections along the branchlets that are up to around in length.
The grey-green to pale green phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to oblanceolate shape with a length of and a width of . The phyllodes are rigid and erect to ascending, generally straight but sometimes shallowly incurved with numerous parallel longitudinal nerves. It blooms from December to March or May to July producing spherical yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences form scattered flower-heads over the plant.
Like many species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The green pyllodes are also often covered in a white powdery coating and have a straight and dimidiately elliptic shape that are sometimes straight and symmetrically broad-elliptic. The glabrous phyllodes have a length of and a width of and have three to five prominent longitudinal veins. It blooms in September producing yellow flowers.
The shrub typically grows to a height of with angular brown to dark brown branchlets that have prominent ridges. The green linear to narrowly elliptic or narrowly oblanceolate shaped phyllodes occur singly or in clusters of two to four. The phyllodes are flat and straight to slightly curved with a length of and a width of . It blooms between May and September producing pale yellow flowers.
The intricate shrub typically grows to a height of but can reach as high as and has a dense spreading habit. It has glabrous and lenticellular obscurely ribbed branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The glabrous, rigid, green to grey-green to blue-green phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to oblong-elliptic or somewhat lanceolate shape are a little asymmetric.
The spreading shrub typically grows to a height of and a width of around . It has slender and angular branchlets that are ribbed and resinous. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen and terete phyllodes are glabrous and have a length of and a diameter of with a callus oblique point at the end and eight parallel and longitudinal nerves.
The shrub is dense and rounded typically growing to a height of and has glabrous branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen, ascending to erect phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic shape and can be incurved. They have a length of and a width of and are semi-rigid and sharply to coarsely pungent and have three distant, raised nerves.
The shrub or tree is slender and erect typically grows to a height of and a width of around . It has angled slightly hairy branchlets with patent to ascending evergreen phyllodes with a flat linear shape that is straight to slightly curved. The glabrous phyllodes are in length with a diameter of . It blooms from June to October producing bright yellow perfumed flower-spikes.
The bushy, aromatic and resinous shrub typically grows to a height of . The glabrous branchlets often have resin encrusting the ribs or entire surface. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The ascending to erect evergreen phyllodes are usually quite slender and straight to shallowly curved with a length of and a diameter of and terminate with a sharp tip.
The tree typically grows to a height of and has fibrous, grey to brown coloured bark on both the trunk and branches. It has grey to brown branchlets that are almost terete which can be densely pubescent or glabrous. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen, narrowly elliptic phyllodes have a tapered base and are in length and wide.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has a spreading habit. patent to reflexed phyllodes that have a narrowly oblong-elliptic to lanceolate shape.
The flower heads are held in the axis of the phyllodes and stem. The seed pods that form following flowering are covered in light golden hairs.
Some fibroadenomas respond to treatment with ormeloxifene. Fibroadenomas have not been shown to recur following complete excision or transform into phyllodes tumours following partial or incomplete excision.
The thick, fleshy and evergreen phyllodes have a linear to narrowly linear-oblanceolate shape with a length of and a width og and have an obscure midrib.
The species epithet, sericophylla, derives from the Greek words, sericos (silken) and phyllon (leaf), and refers to the dense silky hairs found particularly on the young phyllodes.
Acacia rigens, commonly known as nealie, is an erect or spreading shrub or small tree that is endemic to Australia. Other common names include needle wattle, needlebush acacia, nealia and nilyah. Plants grows to between 1 and 6 metres high and have rigid, terete phyllodes that are between 3 and 13 cm long. The bright yellow flowerheads appear in groups of up to four in the axils of the phyllodes.
The coriaceous and evergreen phyllodes have an elliptic to obliquely narrowly elliptic shape that narrows swiftly into the broad pulvinus,. The flat and falcate phyllodes have a length of and a width of and have a hooked apex with two or three prominent main veins. It blooms between July and September producing golden flowers. The cylindrical flower-spikes have a length of and are covered with bright yellow flowers.
The open branched spreading tree or shrub typically grows to a height of with an open;y branched, obconic habit. It has glabrous and prominently ribbed branchlets that have small rounded protuberances Band are angled towards the apices. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The thin phyllodes sometimes have small rounded projections on their surfaces and have an asymmetrical narrowly elliptic shape.
The spreading often dense shrub typically grows to a height of and branches from near ground level. The grey-green phyllodes have a linear to linear-elliptic to narrowly oblong-elliptic shape and are straight to shallowly curved. Phyllodes have a length of and a width of with red to brown margins with numerous, fine, closely parallel veins. It blooms from July to September and produces yellow flowers.
The glabrous phyllodes are formed in groups of two to six on dwarf, knotty and lateral branchlets or singly on new shoots. The phyllodes have a slender linear shape ending in a sharp point and are mostly pentagonal to compressed in cross-section with five to seven prominent nerves. In Western Australia it blooms between May and October producing yellow flowers. The flowers are yellow, and held in spherical clusters.
The sericeous branchlets are covered in fine silvery white hairs but become glabrous as they age. The pale yellowish green new shoots have a silvery sheen. Like most species of Acacia it has light silvery green or grey-green to bluish green phyllodes rather than true leaves. The slender and terete filiform phyllodes have a length of and a diameter of and are thin and flexible and straight to incurved.
Black gidgee is a tree with an upright habit and typically grows to a height of and with a girth of up to or more. Like most Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. These are a grey-green colour with a length of and a width of and slightly curved. The phyllodes have a linear to linear-elliptic shape with a prominent midrib and marginal nerves.
The tree can grow to a height of up to with glabrous dark-reddish coloured branchlets that are angled at extremities. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The variable, evergreen phyllodes have a linear to narrowly elliptic shape. They have a length of and a width of and are wider on young plants and appear narrower on mature plants and similar to Acacia angusta.
The crowded but scattered evergreen phyllodes are patent to inclined with a lanceolate to narrowly triangular shape that is straight to shallowly recurved. The glossy dark green phyllodes have a length of and a width of and are pungent and rigid with a prominent midrib. The tip of the phyllode slowly thins down to a long reddish coloured spine. When it blooms it produces inflorescences that occur singly along rudimentary racemes.
The shrub typically grows to a height of with an open, sparsely branched habit and the branches tend to arch downwards. It has sparsely to moderately hairy branchlets than can be coated in a white powder. The dull-grey green phyllodes are widely spread and rotated to the branchlet. The phyllodes are often convex with a broadly elliptic to orbicular shape having a length of and a width of .
The glabrous shrub typically grows to a height of and can sometimes have a procumbent habit. It has smooth to tessellated grey coloured bark and glabrous, terete and resinous branchlets. The rigid, green phyllodes have a very narrowly elliptic to linear-lanceolate shape and are straight to slightly curved. The phyllodes are in length and have a width of with a prominent midvein and a pungent-pointed apex.
The low spreading to erect multi-branched shrub typically grows to a height of . It can have a dense and often rounded habit with glabrous or sparingly haired branchlets that have white to grey coloured new shoots occasionally with golden tips. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The terete to compressed evergreen phyllodes are sometimes flat and linear and straight to slightly curved.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has an erect or spreading habit. It has smooth, grey to black–coloured bark on the main trunk and limbs with terete, densely hair branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes appear whorled or in clusters and have a linear to narrowly elliptic shape and are usually slightly curved or less frequently straight.
The bushy shrub typically grows to a height of with a dense, spreading, multistemmed, flat-topped or rounded habit. It has glabrous and resin ribbed branchlets that are reddish brown in colour but yellow-green at the extremities. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The glabrous, coriaceous and evergreen phyllodes have an oblong to narrowly oblong-elliptic shape and are straight or occasionally shallowly incurved.
The tree or shrub typically grows to a height of with an erect habit and with straight trunks. It has glabrous and terete branchlets and resinous ribs when still immature. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The ascending to erect phyllodes have a linear shape and are quite straight and have a mostly rhombic cross-section with a length of and a width of .
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has a multi-stemmed habit and glabrous red-brown branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes are attached to the branchlets on raised stem-projections and are ascending to erect. They have an oblanceolate to narrowly oblanceolate shape with a length of and a width of with a prominent midrib and marginal nerves.
The low, spreading pungent shrub typically grows to a height of it usually has many branches with pungent and hairy branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The hairy evergreen phyllodes have an inequilaterally obtriangular to obdeltate shape with a length of and a width of with a more or less prominent main nerve. It blooms from August to November and produces green-yellow flowers.
The open shrub typically grows to a height of . It has light grey and scarred branches and hairy branchlets with spinose stipules that have a length of around . Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The crowded, rigid, pungent and evergreen phyllodes have a length of and a width of and are usually narrower near the apex with nerves that are rarely evident.
The erect prickly shrub typically grows to a height of . It resembles Acacia urophylla but has some subtle differences including trowel shaped phyllodes that have a distinctive gland angle along the barely scalloped or notched adaxial marginh. The phyllodes have a length of and a width of with two main nerves per fact with a few less prominent lateral nerves. It blooms in September and produces yellow flowers.
The rigid prickly shrub typically grows to a height of . The glabrous, short, rigid and straight branchlets are patent to ascending are often spinose and lightly covered in a fine white powdery coating. Like many species it has phyllodes rather than new leaves. The grey-green to blue-green, pungent, sessile and dimidiate phyllodes have a length of and a width of with a midrib near lower margin.
The slender, erect and pungent shrub typically grows to a height of . It has orange-brown coloured branches and hairy branchlets with narrowly triangular stipules that are in length that are incurved. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The patent and occasionally reflexed, rigid, greem phyllodes have a narrowly semi-trullate shape with a length of and a width of with a prominent midrib.
The spreading shrub typically grows to a height of . It can have a rounded habit and a rather dense crown with hairy branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The patent to undulate, coriaceous green phyllodes are usually slightly asymmetric and have an obovate, ovate or elliptic shape with a length of and a width of with one main nerve per face.
Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The linear or very narrowly oblanceolate and flat phyylodes can be straight or slightly subfalcate. The scurfy olive-green phyllodes are in length and and have one to three prominent longitudinal veins. It blooms between October and January producing flower- spikes that occur in groups of one to three in the axils and are in length.
The shrub typically grows to a height of around and has an erect, openly branched habit. It has ribbed branchelets that are densely hairy and has persistent stipules that are in length. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen dimidiate phyllodes have a widely elliptic or occasionally widely obovate shape with a rounded upper margin and a more or less straight lower margin.
The tree typically grows to a height of and has a dense crown with silvery green foliage. It has fissured grey coloured bark and slightly ribbed and glabrescent branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The pungent, glabrescent, leathery and erect phyllodes are straight to slightly curved with a length of and a diameter of and are striated by many fine parallel nerves.
The tree typically grows to a height of less than and scurfy, resinous reddish-brown coloured branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen, glabrous phyllodes are straight to very falcate and are at their widest just below the middle. They are in length and and have parallel longitudinal nerves that are crowded together usually with two or three more prominent than the others.
The tree or shrub typically grows to a height of and has grey-brown, dark brown or reddish brown coloured bark that peels in small flakes and is fibrous below. It has glabrous, light-brown to reddish-brown coloured branchlets that are vaguely triquetrous. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes usually have a narrowly elliptic shape that is often scarcely curved.
The viscid shrub typically grows to a height of but can reach up to and has a spreading a flat topped habit. The stems are covered with fine downy hairs and have long stipules. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The phyllodes are arranged in whorls of 8 to 14 and are more or less flattened and straight or recurved towards apex.
Acacia adunca, commonly known as the Wallangarra wattle and the Cascade wattle, is a species of Acacia native to eastern Australia. The spreading shrub typically grows to a height of with a width of and has long thin phyllodes approximately in length that tend to droop. The phyllodes are dark green and lustrous and feel oily to touch. It produces masses of golden ball flowers from late winter to early spring.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has a spindly habit. It has smooth brown coloured bark and angled glabrous branchlets that are dark red when immature and age to a grey colour. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic or occasionally obovate shape and are mostly dimidiate with straight or slightly convex lower margin.
The multi-stemmed shrub with a height of eventually mature to a tree with a height of with an obconic habit with dense crowns. The densely haired branchlets have discrete resinous ribs towards the apices. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen and variable phyllodes are straight and dimidiate to sickle shaped recurved and usually with a narrowly oblong to elliptic shape.
The green, ascending to erect phyllodes have a length of with a width of and have a very curved apex The thinly coriaceous phyllodes have a prominent midvein and also two other slightly less prominent veins. It blooms from September to November producing yellow flowers. The cylindrical flower- spikes are found on short axillary branchlets. The spikes have a length of and are densely packed with golden coloured flowers.
The shrub is slender and erect typically growing to a height of with a spindly habit. It has terete, finely veined and densely haired branchlets that are mostly brown but quite yellowish towards the apices. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The flat, linear and evergreen phyllodes are pressed closely to the stems and have a length of and a width of .
The shrub can grow as high as but is typically smaller. The glossy green phyllodes have an obliquely obovate shape with the lower margin that is almost straight. It has fissured and fibrous, grey-black coloured bark and stout, angular branchlets The phyllodes have a length of up to . It blooms between March and September producing rod shaped flowers are bright yellow that are found in pairs in the leaf axils.
The phyllodes narrow down to a delicate tip at the end that is normally curved and innocuous to pungent tip. The rigid and glabrous or finely haired phyllodes have many closely parallel and indistinct nerves. It blooms from August to September and produces yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences occur in pairs in the axils and have spherical flower- heads with a diameter of containing 10 to 30 golden coloured flowers.
The low dense shrub typically grows to a height of and to a width of around . It has numerous slender main stems separating from each other at ground level that are covered in smooth or finely fissured, grey coloured bark. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The dull-green to greyish green phyllodes have an asymmetrically elliptic-obovate shape and are usually slightly sigmoid.
The bushy shrub typically grows to a height of with a rounded or obconical habit. The branchlets are sericeous between the resinous ribs particularly at the extremities. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The patent to ascending, slender green phyllodes are straight to slightly incurved with a length of and a diameter of that have eight broad flat topped nerves that are barely raised.
The low, spreading shrub usually grows to a height of and a width of approximately and has a somewhat straggly habit. The terete branchlets are a reddish brown colour that age to a light grey colour. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes have an oblong to oblong-elliptic that can be somewhat sigmoid, they have a length of and a width of .
The shrub has an open to spindly habit and typically grows to a height of . The dull grey-green phyllodes are flat or slightly twisted with an elliptic to broadly elliptic shape that can sometimes be broadly obovate. The phyllodes have a length of and a width of . The shrub blooms between September and November producing up to 20 inflorescences on axillary racemes along an axis of around in length.
Phyllodes staudingeri is a moth in the family Erebidae first described by Georg Semper in 1901. It is found in Sumatra, Borneo, Java, the Philippines and New Guinea.
The slender and glabrous phyllodes have a length of and a width of with a broad nerve along each angle. It blooms from July to September producing yellow flowers.
A. confusa and A. koa both have distinctive phyllodes that differentiate each species but since its introduction C. blackburniae has been recorded to associate with the invasive Formosan koa.
The flat and linear phyllodes have a length of and a width of and are narrowed toward the base. It blooms from September to October and produces yellow flowers.
Th phyllodes have a length of and a width of and have many closely parallel nerves obscure to distinct. It blooms from August to October and produces yellow flowers.
It was described by botanist George Bentham in the London Journal of Botany in 1842. Similar in appearance to A. pycnantha, it can be distinguished by its lighter phyllodes.
The resinous and viscid shrub typically grows to a maximum height of and has a spindly habit. It has brown to grey coloured bark and terete, pale to bright green branchlets that are glabrous or sometimes lightly hairy. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The phyllodes occur singly but sometimes are appear in pairs, they have a more or less linear shape that can be very narrowly elliptical.
The tree typically grows to a maximum height of . It has acutely angular and rather scurfy branchlets that are sparsely and minutely haired on young plants. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The rather chartaceous phyllodes are straight or slightly sickle shaped and are widest above the middle with a length of and a width of and are glabrous to slightly hairy on younger plants with parallel longitudinal nerves.
Initially, bipinnately compound leaves with 12–24 pairs of leaflets grow on the koa plant, much like other members of the pea family. At about 6–9 months of age, however, thick sickle-shaped "leaves" that are not compound begin to grow. These are phyllodes, blades that develop as an expansion of the leaf petiole. The vertically flattened orientation of the phyllodes allows sunlight to pass to lower levels of the tree.
Acacia semiaurea is a shrub of the genus Acacia and the subgenus Phyllodineae. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The oblanceolate shaped thinly coriaceous phyllodes have a length of and a width of have one nerve per face and are sparesly covered with white hairs. When it blooms it produces simple inflorescences in group of four to seven along a raceme axes of with spherical flowerheads.
The evergreen, thinly coriaceous and glabrous phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic or oblanceolate shape and are straight or slightly curved. The flat, shiny phyllodes have a length of and a width of wide with a prominent midrib and two secondary nerves. It blooms between June and August producing golden flowers. The cylindrical flower-spikes occur singly or in pairs in the axils and have a length of with bright yellow to golden flowers.
The phyllodes are in length and wide and have three raised distant nerves. It blooms between July and October producing inflorescences that appear in groups of one to three, or sometimes as many as seven, on an axillary axis that is in length. Sometimes these will appear in the axils of the phyllodes. The spherical flower-heads have a diameter of and contain between 20 to 40 lemon yellow to bright yellow coloured flowers.
The shrub has a dense and multi-branched habit and typically grows to a height of and is able to spread and create thickets by suckering. The light green sessile phyllodes have a quadrangular shape and have a yellow nerve at apex of each angle. The phyllodes have a length of and a width of . The rudimentary inflorescences are found on one or two branched racemes with an axes that has a length of .
The tree or shrub typically grows to a height of and has an erect to spreading habit with finely fissured grey bark. It has resinous angled branchlets that are glabrous or sparsely hairy. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes are flat and straight to slightly curved with a length of and a width of and are mostly glabrous but can be sparsely hairy near the base.
The small shrub typically grows to a height of with a decumbent to spreading habit. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. They often have a whorled or scattered arrangement and a straight to slightly curved curved shape with a length and a width of . The grey-green and terete phyllodes are quite leathery and are glabrous to sparsely hairy and have one longitudinal groove on each surface.
The shrub or tree with a rounded habit that typically grows to a height of that has slender spreading branchlets with dense to sparse hairs. The ascending to erect and crowded phyllodes are on short stem-projections. The flat green phyllodes have a linear-oblanceolate to oblong-elliptic shape and a length of and a width of . It mostly blooms between April and August producing simple inflorescences that occur singly in the axils.
The shrub has erect or bushy habit and typically grows to a height of . It has hairy green, straight, narrowly elliptic to narrowly oblanceolate shaped phyllodes with a length of and a width of and has a prominent midrib. It flowers in the springtime between August and November producing single inflorescences that are found in the axil of the phyllodes. The spherical flower-heads with a diameter of around contain 20 bright yellow flowers.
The shrub can grow to a height of up to and has a spindly habit with slender lenticellular branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. They are found on short stem-projections usually in groups of two or three in the nodes of mature branchlets with a rather crowded appearance. The slender, rigid, evergreen phyllodes are erect to inclined and more or less quadrangular in section.
The multi-stemmed shrub typically grows to a height of with a spreading habit but it is occasionally found as an obconic tree with a height of that has crooked stems and branches. The slightly hairy branchlets often have obscure resinous ribbing near the extremities. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The green to grey- green phyllodes have a blueish coloured tinge and are incurved or sigmoid to sinuous.
The shrub can have a bushy or straggly habit and typically grows to a height of around . It has glabrous or hairy branchlets that are angled at extremities. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The glabrous or hairy, evergreen phyllodes often have an asymmetric oblong-elliptic, broadly obovate or circular shape and have a length of and a width of with an obscure or absent midrib obscure or absent.
Golden wattle occurs as both a shrub or tree that can reach a height of up to . It has smooth to finely fissured greyish coloured bark and glabrous branchlets that are angled towards the apices. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen and glabrous phyllodes are mostly straight but occasionally slightly curved with a length of and a width of and have numerous prominent longitudinal veins.
Acacia undoolyana is a shrub or small tree growing up to 15 m high and has persistent fissured bark. Both stems and phyllodes have a covering of minute flattened hairs, when young. The phyllodes are flat, linear to narrowly elliptic, and silvery when young but later a grey-green. They are sickle-shaped, are 120–220 mm long by 5–15 mm wide, and have a marginal basal gland and a prominent apical gland.
The shrub to typically grows to a height of and has multiple stems and can resprout from perennial rootstock after a bushfire. It has blotchy blue-grey coloured bark with a smooth texture and purple-brown terete branchlets that are often covered in a fine white powdery coating. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The spreading phyllodes have a narrowly oblanceolate to elliptic shape and are slightly sickle shaped.
The shrub has an erect or sometimes straggling habit and can grow to a height of around and often spreads by suckering. It has smooth greenish brown to grey or light brown coloured bark and angled hairy branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The crowded, glabrous and evergreen phyllodes are straight to slightly curved, with a length of and a width of and have an indistinct midvein.
The dense pungent shrub typically grows to a height of . It has ash-grey to pale green coloured, rigid, erect to ascending branchlets that are generally straight and are sparingly divided with obscure ribs. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes are few and distant from each other with a linear shape and a length of and a width of and an obscure midrib.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has a spreading habit. It has slender branches that usually arch downwards and branchlets that are covered in soft hairs. It has small grey-green patent to reflexed phyllodes that have a narrowly oblong-elliptic to lanceolate shape. The glabrous phyllodes are mostly straight to shallowly incurved with a length of and a width of and are abruptly contracted at the base with a prominent midrib.
The spreading and pungent shrub typically grows to a height of . It has glabrous branchlets with a white epidermis that exfoliates as it ages and with caducous stipules. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The sessile, rigid, pungent and evergreen phyllodes have a linear to triangular shape with a length of and a width of with one main nerve and an obscure second nerve parallel to the midrib.
The tree or shrub typically grows to a height of and has an open habit. It has thick, glabrous branchlets that are angled at the extremities and covered in a fine white powdery coating. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. Theglabrous phyllodes are found at the end of obvious stem-projections forming narrow wings that are in length and wide and have one nerve per face and finely penninerved.
The tree is root-suckering and has hard, furrowed and almost black coloured bark. The glabrous or hairy branchlets are angular at extremities. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The coriaceous, sericeous and evergreen phyllodes have a falcate shape with a length of and a width of and have many closely parallel nerves with three to seven of the nerves are more prominent than the others.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a height of but can be as tall as and has an erect habit. It has resin-ribbed branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The glabrous, mid to dark green phyllodes have a narrowly oblong-elliptic to oblong-oblanceolate shape and are straight or slightly recurved with a length of and a width of and have two to nine prominent nerves.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a maximum height of around . It has grey-brown coloured and longitudinally stringy bark and angular yellow-brown to purplish brown branchlets that are lightly haired when young but later become glabrous. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The coriaceous and evergreen phyllodes have a linear shape and are straight to slightly curved with a length of and a width of .
The slender tree or shrub typically grows to a maximum height of around and has glabrous, fawn to yellow coloured, prominently angled branchlets. The bark on the trunk and main branches is grey and fissured. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The yellowish-green coloured phyllodes are resinous and erect and are flat and straight or slightly curved with a very narrowly elliptic to almost linear shape.
The erect tree typically grows to a height of less than and has fissured grey coloured bark. It has light green to brown coloured branchlets that are angular toward the apices but otherwise terete that are sometimes pruinose or scurfy. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The phyllodes are flat and falcate with an elliptic to narrowly elliptic shape and a length of and a width of .
The tree only has single stem typically grows to a height of less than and grey coloured ribbony bark. It has glabrous, scurfy, reddish- brown coloured branchlets that are angular towards the apices. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes instead of true leaves. The flat, straight, or slightly curved phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic shape with a length of and a width of and have one to three slightly prominent main veins.
The tree typically grows to a height of and has fibrous to fissured grey coloured bark that becomes smooth on upper branches. It often has a gnarled habit with the trunk and main branches looking contorted and with a horizontally spreading crown. Like most Acacias it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The pale green and erect phyllodes have a narrowly linear oblanceolate or linear elliptic shape and can be straight to shallowly incurved.
The shrub typically grows to a height of around and has a bushy habit with glabrous branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes are inclined to ascending with a narrowly linear shape and a length of and a width of and are often slightly curved. It blooms between August and September producing spherical flower-heads that contain 15–20-flowered sub-densely packed bright golden flowers.
The glabrous branchlets have a yellowish to light brown colour sometimes with a pale powdery coating that is a more orange colour at the extremities. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The glabrous narrowly elliptic phyllodes are slightly asymmetric with a length of and a width of and are straight to slightly falcate with many parallel longitudinal nerves. It blooms from July to September producing yellow flowers.
The medium sized evergreen shrub grows to a height of and a width of . The plant has an erect habit with glabrous, flattened and angled branchlets. It has phyllodes that are in length and wide. The bright yellow spherical flowerheads appear in groups of 2 to 14 in the axils of the phyllodes from July to November in the species' native range, followed by straight or curved seed pods which are long and .
They have a length of and a width of and have many stomates. The phyllodes are sparsely hairy and have six to ten parallel, longitudinal veins that are equally prominent.
It is closely related to A. multisiliqua which has generally shorter phyllodes with the lowermost gland normally further removed from the pulvinus, a shorter peduncle and larger, differently shaped seeds.
The simple inflorescences occur in groups of two to five are situated in the axils of new phyllodes. The spikes have a length of and the flowers are widely spaced.
The leaves of Daviesia species are like phyllodes. They are usually hard, frequently prickly, frequently circular in section, and sometimes reduced to scales. Some species have cladodes, e.g., D. alata.
The pungent and rigid grey-green phyllodes have a length if and a width of and have eight prominent nerves. It blooms from July to August and produces yellow flowers.
Harden, G.J. (ed.) (1991) Flora of New South Wales, 2 Group 1 plants are identified as having phyllodes, as well as being the only group which features flowers in cylindrical heads.
The silvery-green coloured phyllodes have amore or less linear to narrowly elliptic shape and are straight or slightly curved. The phyllodes are around in length and wide and covered in fine hairs and have a prominent midvein. It blooms between July and October producing inflorescences in groups of 8 to 20 on an axillary raceme along an axis of . The spherical flower-heads have a diameter of and contain 20 to 40 yellow to bright yellow flowers.
The wattle is slender shrub or small and spreading tree that grows to a height of about . It has dry and membranous stipules that are usually less than in length. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The thin and dark green phyllodes have a linear and are usually straight with a length of and a width of with three to seven main veins with the midvein that is most prominent.
Thus, the phyllode comes to serve the functions of the leaf. Phyllodes are common in the genus Acacia, especially the Australian species, at one time put in Acacia subgenus Phyllodineae. Acacia koa with phyllode between the branch and the compound leaves In Acacia koa, the phyllodes are leathery and thick, allowing the tree to survive stressful environments. The petiole allows partially submerged hydrophytes to have leaves floating at different depths, the petiole being between the node and the stem.
The tree typically grows to a height of and has a single stem or divides sparingly near ground level, some trunks have a diameter of up to . The tree has glabrous and branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. It has glabrous green to milky green dimidiate to sickle shaped phyllodes with a length of and a width of and has many longitudinal nerves that are parallel and closely packed together.
A. lineata can grow in alkaline, sandy, or gravely soils. Having phyllodes instead of leaves help A. lineate to survive in dry semi-arid environments, by reducing water loss. The phyllodes of A. lineatea are small, point up and are slightly hairy; adaptations that further reduce water loss. Acacias are able to fix nitrogen in the soil via a host bacteria that live on the roots called rhizobia, which aids in the growth of other plant species.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has a bushy, spreading habit. It has dark reddish brown glabrous branchlets and green narrowly elliptic to oblanceolate shaped pale green phyllodes. The glaucous phyllodes have a length of and a width of and are acute to acuminate with a slightly excentric midrib and obscure lateral nerves. It flowers between September and November producing racemose inflorescences have spherical flower-heads containing 8 to 15 loosely packed light golden flowers.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has an open bushy habit. It has shortly villous branchlets with crowded green phyllodes that have a linear to narrowly oblanceolate or narrowly elliptic shape and can be straight to incurved. The phyllodes are flat with a length of and a width of and have a prominent midrib. It blooms between July and September producing inflorescences with one to seven heads per raceme with simple ones scattered throughout.
The evergreen phyllodes are often continuous with branchlets and have an obliquely elliptic to oblanceolate shape but are often dimidiate. The phyllodes are straight to slightly crescent shaped with a length of and a width of and have prominent pale margins and three prominent longitudinal nerves. It blooms from June to July but has been noted to flower in October and produces yellow flowers. The cylindrical flower-spikes have a length of and are packed with bright yellow flowers.
The erect single-stemmed shrub typically grows to a height of . The dwarf subshrub has prominently ribbed and glabrous branchlets with shallowly triangular stipules with a length of around . Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The thin green phyllodes are crowded on the branchlets with an elliptic to obovate shape and a length of and a width of with one or sometimes two main nerves and a few obscure lateral nerves.
It typically grows to a height in height and has glabrous to sparsely haired branchlets with subulate stipules that around high. Like most Acacias it has phyllodes instead of true leaves, the rigid, terete phyllodes that are in length and wide. The globular yellow flowerheads with a diameter of and containing 12 to 30 flowers appear singly in the leaf axils from August to November. Following flowering curved flat, seed pods form that are long and wide.
The rigid, pungent and glabrous phyllodes are patent to slightly reflexed and straight to slightly recurved with a tetragonous or sometimes trigonous cross-section. The phyllodes are in length and around wide with four main 4-nerves. It blooms from July to September and produces yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences are found singly or in pairs in the axils and have spherical slightly obloid shaped flower-heads containing 16 to 20 cream to pale yellow coloured flower.
The many-branched, glaborus shrub typically grows to a height of and has brown to grey coloured flaky bark with flattened, stout and brownish branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The flat, straight to falcate phyllodes have an inaquilaterally narrowly elliptic shape with a length of and a width of and have three conspicuous main nerves. It blooms throughout the year producing long flower-spikes with white to cream coloured flowers.
The silvery-grey shrub typically grows to a height of . It has smooth, grey to brown coloured bark with two or three angled branchlets covered in dense silky hairs. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The flat and evergreen phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to elliptic shape with a length of and a width of and have three to six prominent longitudinal nerves present of the face if the phyllode.
The shrub or small tree typically grows to a height of and has a loose and erect habit. It has grey coloured bark with a fibrous texture and glabrous finely ribbed that are brown but become grey with age. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The thin and pliable evergreen phyllodes have a narrowly linear shape with a length of and a width of and terminate in a blunt point.
The shrub has a sprawling, decumbent to semi-erect habit and typically grows to a height of and has minni ritchi style bark that is found at the at base of mature stems. The glabrous branchlets have persistent triangular shaped stipules that are around in length. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen, thin-textured and flat phyllodes have a narrowly linear to linear-elliptic shape that is narrowed at the base.
The thick and nerveless phyllodes have an obtriangular or oblanceolate or wedge-like shape with a length of and a width of . It blooms from October to December and produces yellow flowers.
The phyllodes taper to a point and are inconspicuously multistriate with a barely discernible midnerve and eight to ten minor nerves per millimetre. It blooms between May and September producing golden flowers.
The linear phyllodes have a length of and a width of are narrowed at the base and with a raised and prominent midrib. It blooms from August to September and produces yellow flowers.
The rigid and glabrous phyllodes have a length of and a width of with a pungent apex with many parallel and raised nerves. It blooms from August to September and produces yellow flowers.
The rigid, glabrous and pungent phyllodes have a total of eight distant and raised nerves with three nerves on each face when flat. It blooms from August to September and produces yellow flowers.
The shrub is closely related to Acacia cerastes, both are found in the Mount Gibson area north of Kalannie. A. cerastes can be differentiated by its twisted stems and rudimentary, non-pungent phyllodes.
Until 1995, the closely related Acacia applanata was considered to be the same species as A. willdenowiana. A. willdenowiana is also similar to Acacia alata and has phyllodes resembling those of Acacia pterocaulon.
The shrub typically grows to a height of has a spreading, open habit, with scabrous and tuberculate branchlets that have minute hairs. It has evergreen phyllodes with an asymmetric narrowly oblong-elliptic shape that are often shallowly incurved. The sub-glabrous to glabrous phyllodes are in length and and have a prominent midrib. It flowers between January and April producing simple inflorescences occur singly in the axils and have spherical flower-heads containing 10 to 20 pale yellow to almost white flowers.
The tree typically grows to over to a maximum height of and has slender, brittle and pendulous branchlets with caducous and deltate stipules that have a length that is mostly less than . Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The glaucous, evergreen and flexible phyllodes have a linear shape and straight with a small hook at the end. They have a length of and a width of and have one prominent vein with several others.
The green to bright green phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to more or less linear shape and are straight to slightly curved. The phyllodes are glabrous with a length of and a width of with many faint longitudinal veins and one prominent mid-vein. It blooms between August to September in northern areas and September to November in southern areas and produces golden flowers. The inflorescences mostly occur in groups of two to five on an axillary axis that is in length.
The glabrous, evergreen phyllodes are straight or slightly curved and have a narrowly elliptic or narrowly oblong shape. The phyllodes are usually in length but can be as long as and wide with three to seven prominent longitudinal veins. It blooms between March and June in its natural range producing simple inflorescences that occur in groups of one to four usually in the axils. It has spherical flower-heads are in diameter and contain 20 to 35 bright yellow flowers.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has a rounded, bushy and spreading habit. The branchlets are covered with a dense layer of fine hairs velvety citron hairs on older shoots and silvery white hairs on new shoots. It has small, grayish rounded phyllodes and spherical flower-heads of bright golden flowers on long stalks. The grey-green to silvery coloured phyllodes have an elliptic to oblong-elliptic or obovate shape with a length of and a width of .
The often spindly tree or shrub typically grows to a height of but can reach up to It usually has a single stem with flakey or fissured bark that is grey to black in colour. The glabrous angular branchlets are yellowish to brown in colour and usually resinous. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than leaves. The thinly coriaceous, glabrous and evergreen phyllodes have a linear to narrowly elliptic shape and are flat and stright to slightly curved.
The shrub has an erect to spreading habit and typically grows to a height of with angled branchlets that are minutely hairy. It has grey-green phyllodes that can have white to grey hairs. The phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to narrowly oblong-elliptic shape and have a length of and a width of with a prominent mid-vein and fainter lateral veins. t blooms between September and November producing groups of 3 to 16 inflorescences found in the axillary racemes.
The tall shrub or small tree typically reached a height and width of around . Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. It has grey coloured, smooth or finely fissured bark with terete and hairy branchlets that are often covered with a fine white powdery coating. The silver-grey to grey-green coloured phyllodes have a broadly elliptic to ovate shape and a length of and a width of and have hairs on margins and a prominent midvein.
The slender prickly shrub typically grows to a height of and has an erect or spreading habit. It has orange to reddish brown coloured branches and hairy branchlets with narrowly triangular to setaceous long stipules. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The glabrous, rigid, pungent and olive green coloured phyllodes appear quite crowded on the branchlets and are trowel shaped with a length of and a width of with a prominent midrib and absent lateral nerves.
The shrub typically grows to a height of with peeling and fibrous bark. The branchelts are usually densely haired and like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The green to grey-green phyllodes are flat with a narrowly linear shape with a length of and a width of with five noticeable nerves. The rudimentary inflorescences appear on two branched racemes with spherical flower-heads that have a diameter of and contain 15 to 20 light golden coloured flowers.
The low compact shrub typically grows to a height of . It has finely ribbed, green coloured branchlets that are quite hairy with persistent stipules that have a linear-triangular shape and are in length. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather then true leaves. The oblique, ovate to elliptic or circular shaped phyllodes have a length of and a width of and are also covered in hairs and sometimes have two or three imperfect nerves on each face.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and is glabrous. It ha flattened to angular branchlets that are a maroon-brown colour but become grey as they age with prominent ribbing and often with a powdery white coating. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The coriaceous, stiff, green phyllodes have a narrowly oblong shape that can be narrowly ovate-elliptic with a length of and a width of and have three prominent main longitudinal nerves.
The stems are angled and the phyllodes are continuous with branchlets with the free portion of the phyllodes having a linear to linear-lanceolate shape with a length of and a width of . It blooms in the winter months between July and September producing spherical yellow inflorescences. Each simple globular inflorescence has sessile heads and contains between six and eleven bright yellow flowers. Later it will form terete seed pods that are up to in length with a diameter of around .
The tree typically grows to a height of and has fissured and fibrous grey bark. It has slender glabrous slender and sometimes pendulous branchlets with sericeous new shoots with hairs that become silver with age. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The thinly coriaceous grey-green phyllodes have a linear to curved shape and are in length and a width of wide and are finely striated with a central nerve that is more prominent than the others.
The grey-green to silvery light green coloured phyllodes are substraight and shallowly incurved with a flat to compressed-rhombic shape. The phyllodes have a length of and a width of and are coarsely pungent with three nerves per face but often with only the central nerve being obvious. It blooms in August producing yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences occur suingly in the axils with sessile spherical shaped flower-heads that have a diameter of and contain 20 golden coloured flowers.
Hylodes phyllodes is a species of frog in the family Hylodidae. It is endemic to Brazil. Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical moist lowland forest and rivers. It is threatened by habitat loss.
The grey to grey-green phyllodes are ascending to erect with a narrowly linear shape that are commonly shallowly incurved. They are flat and not rigid with a length of and a width of .
The species is closely related to and similar in appearance to Acacia littorea. The species name is taken from the Latin word meaning to cut off, referring to the short blunt end of the phyllodes.
The terete to flat, ascending to erect phyllodes have a length of and a width of and are obliquely narrowed to a distinct, acute point. It blooms from June to August and produces yellow flowers.
Acacia scabra is a shrub of the genus Acacia and the subgenus Phyllodineae. It is native to Western Australia. A. scabra is thought to be a variant of Acacia nodiflora that has slightly larger phyllodes.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Ferdinand von Mueller in 1874 as part of the work Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae. It is commonly mistaken for Acacia perryi which has larger stipules and phyllodes.
The thinly coriaceous phyllodes are silvery-white and covered in a dense mat of woolly hair when young and have five to nine prominent longitudinal nerves. It blooms from May to September producing yellow flowers.
Acacia flocktoniae is a shrub species that is endemic to Australia. Plants grow to between 1.5 and 3 metres high and have narrow phyllodes that are between 4 and 10 cm long. The cream to yellow flower heads appear in racemes of 4 to 10 in the axils of the phyllodes. These appear predominantly between June and September in the species' native range and are followed by straight or slightly curved seed pods which are 4 to 11 cm long and 5 to 7 mm wide.
It is a graceful, pendulous shade tree, which grows from about tall and has a trunk with a diameter of up to about 0.45 m. It has a spreading crown that becomes weeping as the tree matures. Young plants have rigid branches and short straight phyllodes that appear in clusters as trees mature the branches become pendulous and the light green spiky phyllodes in crease in length but are no longer clustered. It has a heavy bloom of spherical pale yellow flowers after winter rains.
The tree typically grows to a height of and has an obconic habit with a flat-topped crown. It has glabrous branchlets with resinous new shoots. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The shiny dark green, wide-spreading phyllodes have a linear to narrowly elliptic shape and are slightly curved and have a length of and a width of and are glabrous with a normally curved tip and many, fine longitudinal nerves and a more prominent central nerve.
The tree can grow to a height of up to and have several stems and has a spreading crown. The pendulous grey-green to green phyllodes have a linear to linear-elliptic shape and are straight or slightly recurved. The phyllodes have a length of and are in width with a prominent midrib and margins and obscure lateral nerves. The inflorescences occur in groups of 10 to 15 with spherical flower-heads that have a diameter of containing 50 to 60 densley packed bright yellow flowers.
The rounded shrub typically grows to a height of and has branches with hairs pressed closely to the surface and golden coloured hairy shoots. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. They often have an asymmetrically oblong-elliptic to oblong-obovate shape with a length of and a width of and are densely haired that becomes sparse with age. The grey-green coloured phyllodes are obtuse to subacute and a have a single main vein with obscure lateral veins.
Acacia riceana forms a dense prickly bush up to 5 m (16 ft) in height in the wettest areas of its range. It is one of several species to have narrow pointed phyllodes but is distinctive in having them arranged in groups of 3 to 6. Acacia riceana bears close resemblance to Acacia derwentiana which has similar phyllodes (only narrower) and distribution. It has dense foliage with weeping branches and flowers in anywhere from July to January with seed pods maturing in January and February.
The spreading diffuse shrub typically grows to a height of and has many branches. The hairy branchlets have a white-grey coloured epidermis that becomes fissured with age and spinose and straight stipules with a length of and often have hardened bases persisting. Like many species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The coriaceous, shiny, dark green and patent phyllodes have an ovate to widely elliptic shape and usually have a length of and a width of and has a prominent midrib.
The spreading and pungent shrub typically grows to a height of . It can have an intricate, sprawling or compact habit and has glabrous branchlets that are often covered in a fine white powdery coating and have spny stipules that are in length and shallowly recurved. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The pungent, coraiceous and green dimidiate phyllodes are widest below or near or below the middle and are in length and in width with a midrib near the abaxial margin.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a height of or as high as . It has glabrous angled branchlets with pendulous phyllodes that have a linear-elliptic to falcate, occasionally oblanceolate shape and are usually narrowed at both ends. The phyllodes are around in length and have a width of and have prominent midribs. It blooms between August and November producing simple inflorescences that occur in groups of 6 to 16 on the raceme with the spherical flower-heads contain 17 to 20 creamy white coloured flowers.
The bushy shrub typically grows to a height of and has glabrous and terete branchlets with hairy golden new shoots. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The semi-rigid, glabrous and evergreen phyllodes are ascending to erect and needle-like with a length of and a diamter of with eight nerves and furrows in between. It blooms from April to August and produces yellow flowers and produces simple inflorescences simple that appear singly or in pairs in the axils.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has a spreading habit. It has slightly ribbed and terete branchlets that are densely covered with straight spreading hairs and have acicular and persistent stipules with a length of . Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The sessile, rigid and evergreen phyllodes have a widely elliptic to oblong shape and are inequilateral with a length of and a width of and have three to four distant and raised main nerves.
The tree can grow to a maximum height of that has obscure stipules on the branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes have a linear shape and are straight or slightly sickle shaped with a length of and a width of . The dark green coloured phylloeds are thin and pliable and have an apex that is occasionally uncinate and have six to nine anastomosing veins of which one to three are much more clearly defined than the others.
They are grey or pale green, with a length of and a width of . The glabrous and thinly coriaceous phyllodes have a linear to narrowly elliptic shape but are occasionally oblanceolate and have a minute, callous and curved mucro. The phyllodes midrib is not prominent and it has obscure lateral nerves that are longitudinally anastomosing. In Western Australia it blooms between August and November but it can flower as late as January in other places and produce profuse flower displays a seed crops in favourable conditions.
The shrub or tree can grow to a height of and can have an erect or spreading habit. The has dark brown coloured and deeply fissured bark with angled or flattened and glabrous branchlets that are often covered in a fine white powdery coating. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The glabrous, evergreen phyllodes have an obovate to narrowly oblanceolate shape that is occasionally narrowly elliptic with a length of and a width of with a prominent midvein.
The glabrous branchlets are obscurely ribbed and angular or flattened at extremities. The flat, grey-green to green coloured phyllodes have a narrowly oblanceolate to linear-elliptic shape and are straight to shallowly incurved. The pungent phyllodes have a length of and a width of with numerous longitudinal nerves that are close together. The simple inflorescences occur most often in pairs on each axil, the widely ellipsoid to obloidal shaped flower-heads are in length and have a diameter of and are packed with golden coloured flowers.
The erect open shrub typically grows to a height of . It has branchlets with ovate shape stipules that are basally rounded and about in length anf wide and covered with a dense matting of woolly hairs. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The silvery-green phyllodes have a broadly elliptic to subrotund shape with a length of and a width of and usually have five or so main veins with a visible network of minor veins branching off.
The tall shrub reaching in height or tree to in height has an erect to spreading habit with grey-black or grey-brown coloured bark that can be smooth or rough. The glabrous branchlets are angled toward the apices. It has phyllodes instead of true leaves which have two prominent veins (giving the plant its species name binervata). The evergreen phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to broadly elliptic or occasionally lanceolate shape and are straight or sometimes subfalcate with a length of and a width of .
Botanische Jahrbücher für Systematik, Pflanzengeschichte und Pflanzengeographie. Leipzig 15(4): 445, Phyllodes villosa It is found in Cameroon and Gabon. Its natural habitat is subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests. It is threatened by habitat loss.
It is closely related to Acacia ptychoclada and superficially resembles Acacia trinervata, Acacia dawsonii and Acacia viscidula. The specific epithet is taken from the Latin word elongatus meaning lengthened in reference to the long, narrow phyllodes.
The phyllodes have a length og and a width of and ahv appressed hairs on nerves and margins with a midnerve and two more prominent secondary nerves. It blooms from March to June producing yellow flowers.
The hairy and coriaceous phyllodes have a length of and a width of and taper to a pungent point and have three to four distant nerves. It blooms from May to August and produces yellow flowers.
The species is closely related to Acacia conniana which has nonpruinose branchlets, shorter phyllodes and smaller pods enclosing smaller seeds. Other relatives are A. anastema and A. longiphyllodinea. The Noongar peoples know the tree as wilyurwur.
The thinly coriaceous, grey-green, dimidiate or slightly sickle shaped phyllodes have a length of and a width of have numerous parallel longitudinal nerves with three to seven of them being more prominent than the others.
Phyllodes verhuelli is a noctuoid moth in the family Erebidae, subfamily Calpinae first described by Samuel Constantinus Snellen van Vollenhoven in 1858. The species can be found in lowland forests in Sundaland, southern Myanmar and the Philippines.
The forewings are plain dark brown. The hindwings are plain pale yellow. The larvae feed on dead phyllodes of Eucalyptus and Acacia species. They construct a shelter of two irregular pieces of dead phyllode joined by silk.
The phyllodes have a length of and a diameter of are densely haired and not rigid and have eight prominent nerves that are each separated by deep furrows. It blooms from August to October producing yellow flowers.
The evergreen asymmetrically elliptic phyllodes are more or less straight with a length of and a width of . The phyllodes are stiff and coriaceous and have three to four yellowish and prominent main nerves running together near the base. It blooms between July and October producing golden flowers. It produces cylindrical flower-spikes with a length of followed by seed pods that are constricted between and raised over the seeds The densely haired seed pods have a length of and a width of with longitudinally arranged seeds inside.
The tree grows to between in height and has a pyramidal habit with glabrous branchlets that have a fine white powdery coating. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes have an obovate to oblanceolate or sometimes narrowly elliptic shape with a length of and a width of . The lemon yellow globular flowerheads appear in racemes from November to December in the species' native range, followed by seed pods that are 5 to 12 cm long and 1.4 to 2.2 cm wide.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a maximum height of and has glabrous and angular, resinous branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The usually glabrous phyllodes have an inequilaterally narrowly elliptic shape and are straight to slightly recurved with a length of and a width of and have three to five prominent veins and many fine, close and nonanastomosing veins. The inflorescences are found in groups of one to four in the axils, with long flower-spikes packed with golden coloured flowers.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has a bushy habit with finely ribbed and hairy branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes have a narrowly linear shape that taper to a fine point and have a length of and a width of with three raised distant nerves. The inflorescences appear in clusters of one to five along and axes that is in length and have spherical flower heads that have a diameter of approximately and contain around 25 pale yellow coloured flowers.
The spreading tree or shrub typically grows to a height of with smooth fissured dark grey bark. The plant generally has a rounded or obconic habit with several stright to crooked, spreading main stems from the base with dense and spreading crown. The slightly shiny, glabrous, green to grey-green phyllodes are variable in shape and size They have a linear to narrowly oblong or narrowly elliptic shape and are in length with a width of about . The phyllodes are coriaceous and have an erect or spreading arrangement.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Karel Domin in 1926 in the work Beitrage zur Flora und Pflanzengeographie Australiens as published in Bibliotheca Botanica. It was reclassified as Racosperma inaequilaterum in 2003 and transferred back to the genus Acacia in 2006. The specific epithet is derived from the Latin word inaequilatera meaning with unequal sides, referring to the very asymmetric phyllodes. A. inaequilerata is closely related to Acacia trudgeniana and has inflorescences and phyllodes resembling those of Acacia marramamba, it is also often confused with Acacia pyrifolia.
The tree or shrub typically grows to a height of . It has fissured brown to grey- brown bark with resinous, scurfy, rusty-brown new shoots that occasionally have a dense covering of silver hairs with glabrous to sparsely haired, terete, light brown to reddish coloured branchlets. Like many species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. It has sickle shaped, glabrous to sometimes sericeous phyllodes falcate with a length of and a width of and have three to five prominent longitudinal veins surrounded by minor veins that are almost touching each other.
It is found in locations exposed to coastal winds, red-eyed wattle grows as a dense, dome shaped shrub; this helps protect against salt spray, sand-blast and erosion of soil at the roots. When sheltered from the wind, it tends to grow as a small tree typically to a height of but can reach as high as . Like many other Acacia species, red-eyed wattle has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The phyllodes range from four to eight centimetres long, and from six to twelve millimetres wide.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has many branches and heavy foliage and a bushy habit. It has ribbed hairy branchlets with the phyllodes emerging from the ribs. The flat, evergreen and linear shaped phyllodes have a length of and a width of and are generally straight or slightly sigmoid and have a single yellow translucent longitudinal nerve that is prominent on each side of the phyllode. It flowers between August and October producing simple inflorescences that have spherical flower-heads that contain 20 to 35 yellow flowers.
The shrub has an erect or spreading habit and typically grows to a height of and a width of around . It has angled or flattened branchlets and linear phyllodes with a narrowly elliptic or narrowly lanceolate shape and are straight or very slightly curved. The phyllodes are in length and wide. It blooms between July and November producing inflorescences in groups of 8 to 25 located in an axillary racemes, the spherical flower-heads have a diameter of and contain 10 to 20 bright yellow or sometimes pale yellow flowers.
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. 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.
The tree typically grows to a height of with a dark deeply fluted trunk with numerous short horizontal branches and angular branchlets with darker young growth and that have a scattering of short hairs. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen, flat, straight phyllodes are glabrescent with a length of and a width of and are finely striated longitudinally with a more prominent midnerve. When it blooms it produces simple inflorescences that occur singly or in pairs in the axils with cylindrical flower-spikes that are in length.
The phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to narrowly elliptic, sometimes narrowly oblanceolate shape. The flowers between January or April and September are yellow, and held in cylindrical clusters in length. The pods are papery, about long and wide.
Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales. 32: 73. The larvae feed on the leaves of Acacia species. They web the phyllodes of their host plant together with silk, creating a shelter from which they feed.
Retrieved June 2012 The shape of the phyllodes named the species ligulata, meaning strap-like or with a small tongue in Latin.Simmons, M. H. (1988). Acacias of Australia, vol. 2. Ringwood, Australia: Penguin Books Australia Ltd. p. 166.
Phyllodes consobrina is a noctuoid moth in the family Erebidae and subfamily Calpinae. It was first described by John O. Westwood in 1848. The species can be found in Asia, including Thailand, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, the Andamans and India.
Plants with shorter phyllodes are often confused with Acacia incurva or Acacia daviesioides. A. trigonophylla one of only a few Acacia species in which the aril faces the base of the pod only Acacia dentifera has the same arrangement.
They are trees, shrubs or lianas, which may be armed or unarmed. Where they have spines, these are modified stipules. In some, prickles arise from the stem's cortex and epidermis. The leaves are bipinnate or are modified to vertically oriented phyllodes.
Daviesia brevifolia (Leafless Bitter-pea) is a broom-like shrub in the family Fabaceae. It is endemic to Australia. It grows to 1 metre in height and has phyllodes with pointed, recurved tips. These are 2 to 5 mm long.
The tree typically grows to a height of . The canopy has a spreading habit that is silvery to bluish in colour. The hard, grey bark is shallowly rimose. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The erect to ascending phyllodes are in length and wide and are terete to more or less flat, well haired and have longitudinal nerves that are not visible. It blooms between February and March and July and August producing yellow flowers.
The phyllodes are asymmetrical, broadest below the middle and long and wide. There are four to five primary veins springing from the phyllode base. It has prominent glands at the pulvinus. Inflorescences are deep yellow spikes in the phyllode axils.
Its silvery branches carry small, gray-green leaves. The narrow phyllodes are about 8 cm long. Its inflorescence consists of lemon-yellow, globular flower heads, profusely borne in panicles, lasting four to six weeks. This wattle is very popular in cultivation.
The flat evergreen phyllodes have a falcate narrowly elliptic shape that tapers gradually towards apex and base. They are in length with a width of with three 3 main conspicuous nerves. The tree flowers between May and June, producing yellow inflorescences.
The silvery blue phyllodes are long and wide and hang vertically from branches. It has terminal inflorescences with an axis that is long. The yellow flower Heads are globular with a diameter of . After flowering brown woody seed pods form.
The shrub is low, spreading and multi-stemmed. It typically grows to a height of . The branchlets have glabrous and resinous ribs with silky haired new shoots in between. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The evergreen phyllodes are ascending and have an obliquely oblong-elliptic to narrowly elliptic shape with a length of and a width of with a mid-nerve that is quite prominent. It blooms from May to August producing yellow flowers.
Acacia gunnii, commonly known as ploughshare wattle or dog's tooth wattle, is a shrub which is endemic to south-eastern Australia. It grows to up to 1 metre high and has prickly phyllodes which are 4 to 15 mm long. The cream to pale yellow globular flowerheads appear singly in the axils of the phyllodes in June to October, followed by curved or coiled seed pods which are 40 mm long and 4 to 5 mm wide. The species was first formally described by English botanist George Bentham in the London Journal of Botany in 1842.
The tree or shrub typically grows to a height of and has branchlets covered with tiny silvery white hairs and light golden coloured new shoots. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The thin, evergreen phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to oblanceolate or narrowly oblong shape with a length of and a width of and are moderately covered with silvery white hairs and have one main nerve per face. When it blooms it produces racemose inflorescences that have spherical flower-heads containing 15 to 20 bright lemon yellow to golden coloured flowers.
The plant either grows as a shrub to a height of around or as a tree with a height of that sometimes resembles a conifer and they has straightish to crooked trunks and main branche. The hoary red-brown to dark grey branchlets have resinous or non-resinous ribs at the extremities. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen phyllodes have a green to grey-green colour are sometimes curved to sinuous or have a sigmoid shape with a length of that appear in clusters of two to five on juvenile plants.
Arid Zone Trees The needle-like phyllodes stand erect to avoid as much of the midday sun as possible and capture the cooler morning and evening light. Any rain that falls is channeled down the phyllodes and branches to be collected in the soil immediately next to the trunk, providing the tree with a more than threefold increase in effective rainfall. Mulga roots penetrate far into the soil to find deep moisture. The roots also harbour bacteria that fix atmospheric nitrogen and thus help deal with the very old, nutrient-poor soils in which the species grows.
The erect, small and wispy shrub that typically grows to a height of . It blooms irregularly throughout the year and produces yellow flowers. It has slender, glabrous flexuose, red-brown coloured branchlets. The pendulous, thickly filiform phyllodes are usually terete to quadrangular.
The tree typically grows to a maximum height of . It has dark brown to black coloured bark that is fibrous and shaggy. It has resinous, terete, reddish brown coloured branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The dull green to grey green, coriaceous, sub-rigid and erect phyllodes have a narrowly linear to narrowly elliptic shape and a length of and a width of . They are flat and straight to shallowly incurved with many parallel longitudinal fine nerves.
It blooms from April to August producing yellow flowers. The simple racemose inflorescences are not prolific. They appear singly within the axils of the phyllodes. The flower-spikes are in length and are densely flowered with pale yellow to light golden coloured flowers.
The erect and bushy shrub typically grows to a height of . The evergreen phyllodes are straight and have a linear to narrowly oblanceolate shape and a length of and a width of . It blooms from November to December and produces yellow flowers.
The divaricate, spreading and prickly shrub typically grows to a height of . It blooms from June to October and produces yellow flowers. The shrub has slender, spinescent, pruinose branchlets. The majority of older phyllodes are shed giving it an open twiggy appearance.
The branches of the Acacia macradenia plant are hairless and smooth. Generally, the younger part of the stem is green and the older parts are brown. Known as phyllodes, the leaf-likes are actually flattened leaf-stalks or petioles. Initially they are bipinnate.
Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. It blooms between March and August producing golden flowers. It is endemic to south eastern parts of the Gulf of Carpentaria where it is found in coastal and sub-coastal districts.
The evergreen grey-green phyllodes have a length of and a width of have five to seven yellowish marginal nerves that are widely spaced and the central nerve being more pronounced than the other. It blooms between February and August producing yellow flowers.
The tree typically grows to a maximum height of . It has dark brown coloured bark that is deeply furrowed. The acutely angular and stout branchlets are densely covered in soft velvety grey hairs. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The Ngaatjatjarra harvested grass seeds (wakati) and worked them with rolling stones to obtain a paste for nutriment. They also gathered nicotiniana excelsior, a tobacco leaf which they dried over fire and which they chew after mixing them with ashes from burnt acacia and phyllodes.
The shrub typically grows to a height of . The stout branchlets have a polished appearance and are a dark red colour and glabrous. The branchlets are usually steeply angled towards the apex. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
Radiation treatment after breast- conserving surgery with negative margins may significantly reduce the local recurrence rate for borderline and malignant tumors. The authors of a 2012 study have derived a risk calculator for relapse risk of phyllodes tumors after surgery.This is available at www.phyllodes.com.
The bushy spreading shrub typically grows to a height of . It blooms from September to February and produces yellow flowers. The branches are erect, rigid, glabrous and grow outward to a diameter of . The phyllodes are thick and rigid with a linear to obovate shape.
The viscid and spreading shrub typically growing to a height of . It flowers from May to September producing yellow flowers. The bark is red-brown minni ritchi style. The phyllodes have an oblique arrangement and a linear-obovate shape, typically in length and wide.
The phyllodes are striate with thick longitudinal nerves. It blooms irregularly throughout the year producing yellow flowers, flowers usually appear in cooler weather often after rainfall events. The simple inflorescences usually appear singly in the axils. The dense golden flower-spikes are in length.
The low and spreading intricately branched shrub typically grows to a height of . It blooms from July to December and produces yellow flowers. The pungent phyllodes are mostly patent with a straight or shallowly recurved shape. They are trigonous-terete approximately in length and wide.
Acacia (particularly mulga) shrublands also cover extensive areas. All the dominant overstorey acacia species and a majority of the understorey acacias have a scleromorphic adaptation in which the leaves have been reduced to phyllodes consisting entirely of the petiole.Simmons, M. 1982. Acacias of Australia.
The dense intricate shrub typically grows to a height of . It has glabrous terminal branches that often arch downwards. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather then true leaves. They form in budles or cluster and are crowded on to short knotty branchlets.
Several of its species bear vertically oriented phyllodes, which are green, broadened leaf petioles that function like leaf blades, an adaptation to hot climates and droughts. Some phyllodinous species have a colourful aril on the seed. A few species have cladodes rather than leaves.
The multi-branched pungent shrub is typically in height with an erect habit. The green branchlets are angled from the stem. The phyllodes are continuous with branchlets forming narrow triangular wings that are long and wide. It blooms between August and November producing yellow flowers.
The spindly erect shrub typically grows to a height of . The dark brown bark is flaky and longitudinally fissured. It has glabrous, coarse, angular upper branchlets. The evergreen glabrous phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic and rarely oblanceolate shape that becomes oblique towards the base.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has a dense or erect to spreading habit and finely greyish haired branchlets. The grey-green to glaucous phyllodes are sometimes deflexed and slightly asymmetric with an oblong-elliptic to narrowly elliptic or lanceolate shape. The phyllodes have a length of and a width of and have one nerve per face with obscure lateral nerves. It blooms between August and October and produces inflorescences in groups of four to ten with spherical flower-heads with a diameter of globular containing 8 to 15 subdensely packed bright golden flowers on widely ovate to subcircular, dark brown to black bracteoles.
The tree typically grows to a height of with a single stem that has a trunk that has a diameter of around . It has hard, thin and shallowly bark that is cracked and fissured along with flattened and acutely angled branchlets that are a light greenish colour at the extremities. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The dark green to grey–green with a slight sheen, dimidiate phyllodes have a length of and a width of 5–15.5 cm long, (1–) 1.5–2.5 (–3.5) cm wide and thinly coriaceous with numerous longitudinal nerves numerous that are parallel and close together.
Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The green to grey-green and slender phyllodes are coarsely pungent and have a straight to shallowly incurved shape with a length of and a width of with fine longitudinal nerves. It blooms inconsistently between January and October producing simple inflorescences that occur singly or, less frequently, in pairs in the axils and have spherical to short-obloid shaped flower-heads that have a length of and a diameter of . The thinly coriaceous to crustaceous seed pods are straight to shallowly curved with a length of and a width of with longitudinal nerves.
The shrub typically grows to a maximum height of . It has silver to grey coloured bark that has a smooth texture. The resinous, slightly angular branchlets are a red-brown or yellow-red colour. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
It is a small, bushy and glabrous shrub that typically grows to in height and across. It has smooth grey coloured bark. The distinctive red branches are angled upward and have prominent ridges. The green slightly curved phyllodes have an elliptic to narrowly elliptic or oblanceolate shape.
The tree typically grows to a height of with a maximum height of . It has smooth, grey or grey-brown coloured bark that becomes deeply fissured. the glabrous branchlets are angled towards the apices. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
Tan wattle grows to a height of about three metres. It is bushy, and is often broader than it is high. Like most Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. These are a grey-green colour, around seven centimetres long and 4 millimetres wide.
A. coriacea seed pod River jam grows to a height of about eight metres. It usually has just one or two main trunks. Like most Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. These are thick and leathery, between twenty and thirty centimetres long, and narrow.
The wattle grows as a rounded, dense and spreading shrub, up to high and wide. The narrow, flat, pale green phyllodes are long by wide, with new growth covered in white hairs. It produces bright yellow, cylindrical flowers, about long, on short racemes from July to September.
The erect and sometimes trailing shrub typically grows to a height of . It is usually has maulitple glabrous stems and is occasionally rhizomatous. The flexible, green to grey green cylindrical stems have barely visible nerves. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The erect slender shrub typically grows to a height of . It can have a straggly or spindly habit with multiple stems. The glabrous branchlets and branches are covered in a fine, white powdery coating. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
Mutations in MED12 are responsible for at least two different forms of X-linked dominant mental retardation, Lujan-Fryns syndrome and FG syndrome, as well as instances of prostate cancer. Mutations in MED12 are associated with uterine leiomyomas and breast fibroepithelial tumors (e.g. fibroadenoma and phyllodes tumors).
The evergreen phyllodes are often recurved with obscure nerves. It blooms between August and November producing yellow flowers. The rudimentary inflorescences have spherical flower-heads containing 30 golden flowers. The linear shaped seed pods have dehisced valves and are generally rounded over and constricted between the seeds.
The thin, horizontally flattened phyllodes resembling triangular scales are in length. The simple inflorescences have globular heads with a diameter of about containing 8 to 12 loosely packed flowers. After flowering shallowly curved seed pods that are long and wide. The oblong-elliptic seeds are long.
New stems sprout from subterranean runners and resprout from base after bushfires. The smooth light grey bark becomes lighter at the end of branches. It forms a soft dense crown of delicate foliage. The linear shaped phyllodes are flat, not rigid, erect, straight to shallowly incurved.
The tree or shrub typically grows to a height of . It has smooth or fibrous and fissured bark. The angular and resinous branchlets can be glabrous or slightly haired and have with prominent lenticels. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The evergreen grey-green, flat phyllodes usually have very narrowly elliptic shape and are straight to falcate with a length of and a width of with three to six prominent main veins that are continuous to the base. It blooms between August and late October producing golden coloured flowers.
Like most Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. These are green with a faint red margin, up to ten centimetres long, and slightly curved. The flowers are yellow, and held in cylindrical clusters. The pods are four sided and thick, up to fifteen centimetres long.
Occurrence is most common between the ages of 40 and 50, prior to menopause. This is about 15 years older than the typical age of patients with fibroadenoma, a condition with which phyllodes tumors may be confused. They have been documented to occur at any age above 12 years.
Acacia blakelyi is a shrub or tree belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Phyllodineae. The dense glabrous shrub or tree typically grows to a height of . The branchlets are flexuous with caducous stipules. The green phyllodes are horizontally flattened with a linear to very narrowly elliptic shape.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has a diffuse and multi-branched habit. The sparsely haired or glabrous branchlets have long stipules along there length. The branchlets have a rounded cross section. Like most species of Acacia the shrub has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The shrub has an open and spindly habit, with a height of . The resinous and glabrous branchlets are generally terete in form. The glabrous phyllodes are straight with a narrowly elliptic shape and are in length and wide. Flowers are yellow and occur sometime between May and October.
The simple inflorescences occur singly in the axil of the phyllodes. The globose flower heads with a diameter of and contain 35 to 60 bright yellow flowers. Following flowering smooth papery seed pods form. The pods are straight and slightly constricted between seeds with a length of and wide.
The open shrub typically grows to a height of . It usually has few main branches that are erect to inclined and curved to straight. It has reddish-brown or sometimes green branchlets that are ridged and angled. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The glabrous and evergreen phyllodes have a narrowly oblanceolate or narrowly elliptic shape and are straight to slightly curved with a length of and a width of with a prominent midvein and marginal veins and are finely penniveined. The plant blooms throughout the year producing pale yellow flowers.
The phyllodes are in length and wide with a prominent midvein. It blooms between July and September producing inflorescences in groups of 5 to 25 in an axillay raceme with spherical flower-heads that have a diameter of containing 8 to 15 lemon yellow to pale yellow coloured flowers.
The phyllodes have two prominent main veins free to the base. It blooms between June and July producing yellow flowers. The flower-spikes are sparsely arranged along a length of . Following flowering linear shaped seed pods form that are coiled and twisted and have a width of around .
The name probably refers to the smoothness of the phyllodes, which are flat and often appear veinless. Bentham, when publishing this species, used the spelling omalophylla, which he corrected to 'homalophylla' in his Flora of Australiense in 1864. The former spelling is used by some botanists and authors.
The hairy phyllodes are in length and wide and have many longitudinal indistinct nerves. When it blooms it produces simple inflorescences with spherical flower-heads containing 17 to 25 light golden coloured flowers. Following flowering flat and narrowly oblong red-brown seed pods form that are in length.
The spreading and dense shrub typically grows to a height of . It blooms from July to August and produces yellow- orange flowers. The linear phyllodes are in length with a hooked tip. The single flower heads have a diameter of containing 30 to 42 golden to orange flowers.
Government of South Australia, Department of Environment and Natural Resources. eFloraSA. Retrieved June 2012 The phyllodes are eaten by cattle and often defoliated by rabbits around the lower part of the plant. Kangaroos and livestock use the plants as shelter. Herbivores grazing on the seedlings can severely limit regeneration.
The slightly to prominently flexuose and glabrous branchlets have persistent stipules. The evergreen phyllodes are continuous with branchlets and form opposite wings with each one extending to the next below. Each phyllode is in length and has a width of . It produces yellow spherical inflorescences between August and December.
The shrub is erect or sometimes sprawling and typically grows to a height of . The stems are suckering and can spread. It has few phyllodes which are continuous with branchlets and form opposite wings with each one extending to the next beneath. The glabrous dark greenwings are in width.
Acacia concurrens, commonly known as curracabah or black wattle, is a shrub native to Queensland in eastern Australia. Formerly known as Acacia cunninghamii, the new name Acacia concurrens describes the converging primary veins on the phyllodes. It is very similar to Acacias such as Acacia leiocalyx and Acacia disparrima.
The phyllodes are in length and and have three to four prominent veins with four or five less prominent veins. It blooms from May to September producing yellow flowers. The flower-spikes have a length of . After flowering linear seed pods form that are constricted between the seeds.
The spreading viscid shrub typically grows to a height of . The shrub has a flattened crown. It has glabrous or with lines of appressed hairs, terete and resinous branchlets with persistent stipules that are in length. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The prickly appearance of the shrub refers to the pointy phyllodes (leaves), which are rigid, straight, 4 angled and linear in shape. Furthermore, the leaves are approximately 2–9 cm long and 1-2mm wide, subglaucous (between glaucous and green) with lighter coloured veins at each angle and hairless with age. The flowers are bright yellow, fuzzy spheres, 7-10mm in diameter that come singularly or rarely in pairs and are located on 12-25mm hairy stalks in the axil of phyllodes. The pods are 3–5 cm long and 10mm wide, straight or slightly curved and made of a hard and woody material covered in little, soft, white hairs with slight constrictions between seeds.
Acacia ausfeldii, commonly known as Ausfeld's wattle or whipstick cinnamon wattle, is a shrub species that is endemic to south-eastern Australia. It grows to between 1 and 4 metres high and has phyllodes that are 2 to 7 cm long and 2 to 6 mm wide. The yellow globular flowerheads appear in groups of two or three in the axils of the phyllodes in August to October, followed by straight seed pods which are 4 to 9 cm long and 2 to 4 mm wide. The species was first formally described in 1867 by German botanist Eduard August von Regel based on a horticultural specimen grown from seed collected by J.G. Ausfeld in Bendigo, Victoria.
A closely related species, koaia or koaie (A. koaia), is found in dry areas. It is most easily distinguished by having smaller seeds that are arranged end-to-end in the pod, rather than side by side. The phyllodes are also usually straighter, though this character is variable in both species.
Western myall typically grows as a shrub or an upright tree to a height of but can grow as tall as . It has fissured grey coloured bark and a dense spreading to rounded crown. It has pendulous and hairy branchlets. Like most Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The prostrate to ascending, erect, open or dense shrub typically grows to a height of . It blooms from December to May and produces creamy-white flowers. The branchlets are shortly covered with small soft hairs to sparsely or densely puberulous. The pungent green phyllodes are inequilateral, obtriangular to obdeltoid shape.
There are 3 subspecies. Acacia mucronata subsp. longifolia is distinguished from the other 2 subspecies (both apparently Tasmanian endemics) in having phyllodes usually more than 9 cm long (rarely less than 10 times as long as wide) and usually acute, this is reflected in the name: mucronata, i.e. "mucronate, pointed".
Like most Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. These are green, three to seven centimetres long, and two to five millimetres wide. They terminate in a spine about two millimetres long. Hooked spines up to five millimetres long also occur in the axils of leaves and stems.
The shrub typically grows to a height of . It flowers from October to May producing yellow flowers. It has many resinous stems and angular, flattened and glabrous branchlets that are greenish yellow to pale brown colour and usually scurfy. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
Dicranosterna semipunctata is a species of leaf beetle common in NSW and Victoria, (SE Australia). It is a honey brown color, strongly convex and feeds on phyllodes Acacia such as blackwood Acacia melanoxylon. In New Zealand it has become a potential problem for the trees and biological controls have been investigated.
A. aphylla is spiny and leafless erect and widely branching shrub that grows to in height and with a width of approximately . The generally bright green branchlets are rigid, terete and obscurely ribbed. They are smooth, glaucous, glabrous and coarsely pungent. Unlike most Acacia the phyllodes are absent for A. aphylla'.
Acacia macradenia is also known as the zig-zag wattle, which derives from its zig-zag stem growth pattern. Another name used to identify A. macradenia is the 'bed of rivers'. Distinguishing features include alternating phyllodes, yellow globular clusters growing at the forks of the branches and a 'zig-zag' stem.
The dense spreading shrub typically grows to a height of . It has glabrous or puberulous branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The thick and fleshy evergreen and horizontally flattened pjhyllodes have a narrowly oblong-oblanceolate shape with a length of and a width of .
The bushy shrub typically grows to a height of and has a dense habit. It has dark red-brown to grey coloured bark that is longitudinally fissured at base of main trunks. The glabrous branches have resinous new tips. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The small tree or shrub is slender and erect and typically grows to a height of . The smooth pruinose brown bark is found over the length of the trunk and branches. The terete compressed branchlets are a light brown in colour. The obliquely narrowly elliptic phyllodes narrowed abruptly at the base.
It grows as a shrub to small tree from 1 to 5 m (3.3 to 16.4 ft) high. As with all wattles, it has leaf-like structures known as phyllodes instead of leaves, which are compound (pinnate) and measure in length. The globular yellow flowers appear in spring (August to October).
The slender willowy shrub or tree typically grows to a height of . The slender erect habit forms a dense crown of evergreen foliage. The branchlets are normally glabrous and ribbed. The feather like phyllodes are large made up of two to five pairs of pinnae with the larger being in length.
Acacia granitica is a spreading or upright shrub high and wide, occasionally growing to tall in favourable conditions. Its branches grow horizontally from ground level and have a lined, roughish bark. Smaller branches are smooth and generally round. The phyllodes are more or less rigid, straight and narrowly elongated, long and wide.
The tree or shrub typically grows to a height of but can grow as tall as and has slender to spreading branches. The ribbed branchlets can be either glabrous or hairy. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The grey-green coloured and crowded, on short stem-projections.
The rounded or obconic shrub typically grows to a height of . The plant often has contorted trunks and main branches with grey coloured bark that is often fissured on the main trunks. The sparsely haired branchlets become glabrous with age. Like many species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The erect shrub typically grows to a height of . It has stems are covered in long and soft hairs that are around in length. The long spreading and yellowish stipules on the stems and branchlets are covered in bristly hairs. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
These are bluish grey in colour and have an elliptic or ligulate shape that tapers to the apex. The straight to slightly curved phyllodes are in length and wide and have numerous obscure parallel nerves. It flowers shortly after rains. Flowers have been collected between January and May and August and September.
As with many arid shrubland Acacia species, it has phyllodes instead of leaves. Its flowers are yellow, and held in spherical clusters about 5 millimetres in diameter. The seed pods are held erect above the foliage, instead of hanging down like most Acacias. The pods can be up to 9 centimetres long.
The compact and pungent shrub typically grows to a height of . It blooms from September to December and produces yellow flowers. The shrub has rigid, striate-ribbed and glabrous branchlets. The thick rigid phyllodes are sessile, with a narrowly linear to oblong- elliptic shape and are around in length with a width of .
The dense and spreading shrub typically grows to a height of and to wide. It has fine to densely haired branchlets. The phyllodes are ascending to erect with a straight oblong-elliptic to narrowly oblong shape. Each thick fleshy phyllode has a length of and a width of with a non-prominent midrib.
The bushy and glabrous shrub or tree typically grows to a height of . It has pendulous, yellow-coloured and glabrous branchlets. The thin light green phyllodes are usually pendulous with a linear to lanceolate shape and have a length of and width. It blooms from May to August and produces cream flowers.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a height of . It has terete branchlets that can be covered in a fine white powdery coating. The branchlets are rarely glabrous and more often sparsely to moderately pubescent with spreading, straight hairs. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The scurfy resinous shrub typically grows to a height of and has a rounded habit. It has smooth or slightly rough, grey coloured bark. The slightly angular branchlets are light to dark brown in colour. The oblique flat phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to narrowly oblanceolate shape and are in length and wide.
Like most Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. These are green, and may be up to 10 centimetres long and about three millimetres wide. The flowers are yellow, and held in cylindrical clusters up to two centimetres long and five millimetres wide. The pods are papery, about three millimetres wide.
Phyllodes imperialis, the imperial fruit-sucking moth or pink underwing moth, is a noctuoid moth in the family Erebidae, subfamily Calpinae. It was first described by Herbert Druce in 1888. The species can be found in north-eastern Queensland to northern New South Wales, Papua New Guinea, Solomons, Vanuatu and New Caledonia.
The bushy shrub or tree typically grows to a height of with the canopy spreading to a width of . It has glabrous branchlets with rough brown bark on the stem. The patent to pendulous grey-green phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to oblanceolate shape. Each olive green glabrous phyllode is and are wide.
The rigid spreading prickly shrub typically grows to a height of . It has striated branches that have a powdery white coating between the ribs. The branches divide down to many short, spinescent, aphyllous branchlets. The flat, linear and erect phyllodes have a length of and a width of and a raised midrib.
The greaan and glabrous or sparsely haired phyllodes are in length and wide. It blooms from July to August and produces yellow flowers. The rudimentary inflorescences occur on single headed racemes along an axis that is less than long. The spherical to obloid shaped flower-heads contain 15 to 30 golden coloured flowers.
The spreading resinous shrub typically grows to a height of . The glabrous shrub has light grey coloured bark. The dark green, ascending to erect and incurved phyllodes are usually in length but can rach as long as and have a width of . It blooms from July to September and produces yellow flowers.
The shrub typically grows to a maximum height of and has a spreading and resinous habit. It has dark grey coloured bark that has a smooth texture and glabrous angular branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. It blooms between January and July producing golden flowers.
The erect single stemmed tree typically grows to a height of in height. The bark is smooth toward the tree top and rough and fibrous at the base. It has stout angled branchlets that are tawny yellow to maroon in color. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The intricate shrub has an erect or sprawling habit with many branches. It typically grows to a height of but can reach up to around . It has green glabrous branchlets. The phyllodes are continuous with the branchlets, splitting to form opposing wings along the branchlet with each one extending to the next underneath.
Phyllodes are in length and wide and have three to four prominent main nerves. It blooms from May to August producing yellow flowers. The flower spikes are in length with loosely arranged pale yellow flowers. The seed pods that form afterward have a linear shape and are raised over and constricted between seeds.
The shrub is erect and spreading and typically grows to a height of and wide. It has grey or brownish grey coloured bark that is fissured or occasionally smooth. The velvety terete branchlets are a light fawn to dark brown colour. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
Acacia loderi grows as a large shrub or small tree high, with an erect or spreading habit. The bark is grey. Like all wattles it has leaf-like structures known as phyllodes instead of leaves. These are pale grey-green to green and very narrow and long, measuring in length by wide.
The tree typically grows to a height of with fissured, fibrous grey bark. It blooms from May to July producing yellow flowers. The tree oftan has an obconical form with glabrous branchlets and pale-citron-sericeius new shoots. The falcate, linear, widely spreading phyllodes have a length of and a width of .
The resinous shrub has a spreading habit and typically grows to a height of with a width of . The generally smooth pale grey-brown coloured bark is minutely fissured. The angular yellow to red-brown branchlets have small resinous hairs and obscure ridges. The linear green phyllodes occur in groups of six at the nodes.
B 235, 509 (1951).Orthostichy, Parastichy and Plastochrone Ratio in a Central Theory of Phyllotaxis Emerging phyllodes or leaf variants experience a sudden change from a high humidity environment to a more arid one. There are other changes they encounter such as variations in light level, photoperiod and the gaseous content of the air.
The dull green phyllodes are normally soft and delicate and can be straight or shallowly curved or wavy. They have three or more parallel longitudinal nerves per face but normally only the central nerve is apparent. The apex narrows to a fine and pungent point. It blooms from April to October producing yellow flowers.
The open and wispy shrub typically grows to a height of . It has slender branchlets with spinose stipules that are that are not common on mature plants. The linear evergreen phyllodes have a length of and a width of with a single prominent nerve. It blooms from August to September and produces cream flowers.
The diffuse and multi-branched shrub typically grows to a height of . The glabrous branchlets have minute stipules and tend to be a red-brown colour at the extremities and age to a light-grey colour. The sessile acicular phyllodes have a length of and are around . It blooms from August and produces yellow flowers.
The dense and rounded to spreading resinous shrub typically grows to a height of . The green phyllodes have an obliquely ovate or oblong-elliptic shape and are length and wide. It blooms from August to January and produces yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences occur as single globular heads mostly containing 12 to 16 golden flowers.
Acacia bracteolata is a shrub belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Phyllodineae endemic to Western Australia. The spreading shrub typically grows to a height of . The branchlets are hairy to villous and have long stipules. The asymmetric phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to oblanceolate shape with a length of and a width of .
The shrub or tree has a spindly open habit and typically grows to a height of around . It has pendulous branches and red-brown coloured slender branchlets. The filiform, terete to quadrangular, phyllodes have a length of and a width of . The simple inflorescences have spherical flower-heads that contain around 35 yellow coloured flowers.
It usually has just one or two main trunks. Like most Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. These are rigid, round in cross-section with a diameter of about two millimetres, between ten and fifteen centimetres long, and curved. The flowers are yellow, and held in cylindrical clusters about two centimetres long.
The phyllodes are in length and wide. The simple inflorescences simple resemble golden spikes that are in length. The seed pods that form later are flat with an oblong to narrowly oblong shape with a length of and a width of . The shiny brown obloid-ellipsoid to ovoid seeds are long and half as wide.
The phyllodes have a length of and a width of around . The simple inflorescences occur singly per axil. The small spherical flower-heads contain 8 to 18 bright lemon yellow flowers. The blackish glabrous seed pods that form after flowering have a length of and a width of and contain one to three oblong seeds.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a maximum height of and has multiple stems covered in a powdery white coating. It has dark grey coloured bark that is quite fibrous. The glabrous light brown branchlets are terete except for near the apices. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The glabrous to sub- glabrous green phyllodes have a length of and a width of with obscure nerves. It blooms from August to October and produces yellow flowers. The inflorescences occur on single headed racemes along an axis with a length of around . The oblois shaped flower-heads contain 20 to 25 golden coloured flowers.
The shrub typically grows to a height of . It has a dense, rounded habit and has a diameter of around . The resinous, glabrous branchlets are aromatic when crushed. The thick green nerveless phyllodes are crowded on the branchlets and have an oblong to asymmetrically cuneate shape that is recurved at least at the apex.
The tree is found with heights of but must often is found with a height of around and has an erect to spreading habit. The grey to greyish brown coloured bark is finely fissured or sometimes smooth. It has reddish coloured, terete and glabrous branchlets. Like most Acacias it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
Acacia consanguinea is a shrub of the genus Acacia and the subgenus Plurinerves that is endemism to south western Australia. The spreading broom- like shrub typically grows to a height of . It has terete and nervless ash grey coloured branchlets with caducous stipules. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The tree typically grows to a maximum height of . It has dark brown to grey coloured bark that is longitudinally fissured. Its dark red to brown coloured branchlets are glabrous or lightly haired and are flattened towards the apices and have scurfy ridges. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The shrub has a multi-branched and rounded shrub that typically grows to a height of and a width of . The rigid and often hooked phyllodes reach up to a length of . It blooms between winter and spring producing large yellow spherical flowers in winter. The wrinkled brown seed pods are brittle to leathery.
The pungent, rigid phyllodes have a length of and a width of and are indistinctly multistriate. It blooms from April to June producing yellow flowers. The rudimentary inflorescences occur as flower-spikes with a length of and are not densely flowered. The narrowly oblong seed pods have a length of and a width of .
The low spreading domed shrub typically grows to a height of . It has flexuose branchlets that are slightly ribbed and usually lightly covered with stiff sharp hairs. The evergreen, glabrous, sessile phyllodes have a length of and a diameter of and eight equal raised nerves. It blooms from October to February producing yellow flowers.
The shrub typically grows to a height of in height. It blooms between May and August producing inflorescences with yellow flowers. The resinous shrub hasp apically angular yellowish glabrous branchlets and are often scurfy and have small ridges. The evergreen linear to narrowly elliptic shaped phyllodes with a length of and a width of .
The silvery to silvery blue-green phyllodes are falcately recurved over their entire length. Each phyllode is in length and wide. There are one or two simple inflorescences on each axil forming light golden flower spikes that are with flowers densely arranged within. Following flowering red-brown to dark brown linear seed pods form.
Acacia arafurica is a shrub or tree growing up to 4 m high, with terete branchlets, which are sparsely to densely pubescent. The phyllodes are asymmetrically ovate to rhomboidal. It blooms between April and July producing flower-spikes that occur singly or in pairs. The spikes are and wide packed with golden coloured flowers.
Acacia binervia, commonly known as the coast myall, is a wattle native to New South Wales and Victoria. It can grow as a shrub or as a tree reaching 16 m in height. This plant is reportedly toxic to livestock as the foliage (phyllodes) contain a glucoside which can produce hydrogen cyanide if cut.
Acacia brockii is a slender tree growing to 5 metres, with silvery-grey foliage. Acacia brockii is distinguished from other Northern Territory Acacias by its flattened hairs on its phyllodes which fall off, its fringed bracteoles with acute apices which extend beyond the flower buds, and by the fine, long, silvery hairs on its calyces.
The evergreen linear to slightly curved phyllodes are around in length and wide. Veins are only found in the midrib area and are raised on both surfaces of the blade. The foliage has a blue-grey hue overall. It flowers between about March and July, producing moderately dense flower-spikes that are in length with small lemon yellow flowers.
The stipules are 4 to 17 cm long. The submerged grass-like structures are called phyllodes, are actually modified leaf stalks. The stems are cylindrical, without many branches, and grow from 1 to 2 metres. The main difference between this species and other pondweeds is a discoloured flexible joint just below the top of the long leaf stalk.
The slender tree with an open crown typically grows to a height of around . It blooms from June to July producing yellow flowers. It has stout angular branchlets that are glabrous with a powdery white coating. The straight to sigmoid phyllodes are attenuate at the base with a length of in length and a width of .
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has a decumbent or spreading shrub. The branchlets have tiny hairs between resinous ridges and tend to be angled at the extremities. Like most Acacias it has phyllodes instead of true leaves. They have a narrowly oblanceolate to linear shape and can be straight or slightly curved.
The phyllodes have a length of and width of and a small knob-like mucro at the apex and three prominent longitudinal nerves. It blooms from January to October producing yellow flowers. The cupular flowers widely spaced and the petals have a prominent midrib. After flowering brown woody, narrowly oblanceolate, flat, seed pods form that are basally narrowed form.
Limestone wattle grows as a spreading, tall shrub up to and wide. Like most Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. These are bright green, oval in cross-section, and may be up to long. The flowers are yellow, and held in cylindrical clusters about five millimetres in diameter and contining 15 to 20 flowers.
The bushy and prickly shrub typically grows to a height of with an erect or decumbent habit. The branchlets are terete with fine ridges and light to densely hairy. The sessile phyllodes have an ovate to lanceolate or elliptic shape and are in length and wide. It blooms from July to October and produces yellow flowers.
White stemmed wattle usually grows as a dense shrub between in height and is often much wider than it is tall. The trunks and branchlets are often coated with a white powdery substance. Its branches are white or greenish-white, with many bends and twists. Like many other Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The resinous shrub typically grows to a height of . It has slender, glabrous branchlets with yellow ribbing. The green filiform phyllodes are straight or shallowly incurved with a length of and a width of . It flowers between August and November producing simple inflorescences that occur singly or in groups of two or three in the axils.
Acacia ulicifolia is decumbent to an erect shrub high, with smooth grey bark. The phyllodes which are leaf like in appearance and function, are short and needle like, long. The inflorescence of the plant, or the collections of flowers, consist of a flower head attached to the stem by a long slender stalk long. The flowers are pale cream.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has a bushy, rounded and spreading habit. The glabrous branchlets are angled or flattened towards apices and have long stipules. It has smooth or finely fissured bark that is a dark greyish brown colour. It has glabrous green phyllodes with an oblanceolate or sometimes narrowly oblong- elliptic shape.
The phyllodes are straight to slightly curved with a length of and a width of , they have a prominent midvein. The shrub blooms between September and October. It produces simple inflorescences that occur singly or in pairs in the axils. The spherical flower-heads have a diameter of and contain 28 to 55 bright yellow flowers.
The glabrous phyllodes have a slightly recurved tapered point and resinous nerve at the apex of each of the four angles. It blooms from August to October producing yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences are found on stalks that are in length. The obloid to short-cylindrical flower-heads are in length and packed with golden flowers.
Black mulga typically grows to a height of about and often has a weeping habit. It usually has just one trunk and has grey fissured bark on the trunk and larger branches. Like most Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. These are a grey-olive colour, and may be up to long and about wide.
Acacia anastema, commonly known as sandridge gidgee or just gidgee, is a tree in the family Fabaceae. Endemic to Western Australia, it occurs within a fairly small area of semi-arid land east of Carnarvon. Sandridge Gidgee grows as an upright tree to seven metres high. Like most Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The species was first described the species in the journal Nuytsia by the botanist Bruce Maslin in 1974. The name ‘aphylla’ in Latin means without leaves, due to the absence of phyllodes. A. aphylla was recorded as rare in 1950 and after 1992 it was listed as vulnerable then became protected under the Endangered species Protection Act 1992.
The bushy glabrous shrub has a rounded to spreading habit and normally in height, sometimes reaching and usually to a width of . The bark is smooth and a light grey colour. The narrowly elliptic to oblong- elliptic or obovate to oblanceolate, phyllodes have a length of and a width of . It produces yellow flowers from April to November.
It grows as a procumbent or spreading shrub typically growing to a height of in height. The stems can be glabrous or have small erect hairs present and with linear stipules that are long. The phyllodes occur in grouped whorls with six to ten present in each group. Each flattened or slightly recurved phyllode is around in length.
It is usually a small tree with a height of and has been recorded with a dbh of . It has furrowed and flaky bark that is dark grey to black in colour. The stout and angular, lightly haired branchlets with a pale brownish grey colour. Like many species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The phyllodes are in length and wide with a prominent midvein and obscure or faint lateral nerves. It blooms between April and October producing bright yellow flowers. The inflorescences are found in groups to 5 to 15 in axillary raceme with spherical flower-heads that have a diameter of and contain 15 to 30 bright yellow flowers.
The erect and bushy shrub or tree typically grows to a height of . It has angled branchlets with fine yellow ribs. The ascending to erect pungent smooth phyllodes have a linear shape and are flat with a length of and wide and have prominent midrib and marginal nerves. It blooms from July to October and produces yellow flowers.
The spreading pungent shrub typically grows to a height of . The branchlets are covered in small curved hairs and have scarious triangular stipules that are around in length. The evergreen rigid and pungent phyllodes are quadrangular in section with a length of and a width of around . It blooms from September to December and produces yellow flowers.
The dense shrub or tree typically grows to a height of . It has glabrous and flexuose branchlets with caducous light-brown stipules with a length of . The smooth, fleshy, green phyllodes are terete to subterete with a length of and a width of and are slightly incurved at apex. It blooms from August to October and produces yellow flowers.
The compact or sprawling shrub typically grows to a height of and a width of up to . It has reddish to orange coloured branches with branchlets that are densely covered in fine hairs and setaceous stipules that are in length. 2.5–3.5 mm long. The rigid green phyllodes have inequilaterally lanceolate to narrowly lanceolate shape that is sometimes linear.
A much more common species such as Acacia obtusifolia, should be researched instead. Recent reports on regrowth after the 2006 bushfires indicates that the phyllodes of young plants have little to no dimethyltryptamine content. This is presumed to be due to the young age of the plants versus the old growth that stood before the fire.
The spindly to diffuse or weeping shrub or tree typically grows to a height of . The pendulous, flexuose and glabrous branchlets have resinous new shoots. The green to grey-green, linear phyllodes are widely and strongly incurved. They are on length and wide with a wide yellowish central nerve and one to three finer parallel intervening nerves.
The rounded or straggly shrub or tree typically grows to a height of . The species can have multiple stems at the base with a spreading and bushy canopy above. The phyllodes are variable with a narrowly linear to linear-oblanceolate shape that can sometimes be narrowly elliptic and straight to shallowly curved. Each phyllode is in length and wide.
The shrub typically grows to a maximum height of . It has red-brown to blackish coloured minni ritchi style bark peels in long slender strips. The densely haired branchlets are mostly terete with angular upper branchlets slightly and have wide irregular bands of resinous tissue. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
Acacia balsamea, commonly known as balsam wattle, is a shrub of the genus Acacia and the subgenus Plurinerves. The rounded and infundibular shrub typically grows to a height of . It had erect yellowish branchlets. The khaki green aromatic phyllodes are erect with a straight to shallowly curved shape with a length of and a diameter of .
The spreading viscid shrub or tree typically grows to a height of and to a width of around . It blooms from September to November and produces yellow flowers. The obliquely widely elliptic to elliptic phyllodes are long and wide. The simple inflorescences have globular flower heads with a diameter of containing 54 to 60 golden flowers.
The phyllodes are in length and less than wide and also covered in fine downy hairs with a single obscure impressed nerve on upper the upper surface. It usually blooms between May and August producing yellow flowers. The spherical flower-heads contain 25 to 40 yellow coloured flowers. After flowering sticky and leathery seed pods form.
The bushy shrub or tree typically grows to a height of and has deeply fissured grey bark. It has sparsely hoary and glabrous branchlets with obscure resinous ridges. It has erect, glabrous to hoary, grey-green phyllodes with a narrow elliptic to linear shape that are in length and wide. It produces yellow flowers in July.
The shrub has a slender rush-like habit and typically grows to a height of . It has a multi-stemmed base with narrowly winged upper stems. There are few to no phyllodes which have a linear to narrowly elliptic shape and are in length and have a width of . It produces yellow flowers between August and September.
The shrub is erect and bushy typically growing to a height of . It has angular light brown or reddish that become to flattened towards apices. The smooth bark becomes fibrous and is grey-brown in colour and reddish beneath. It has linear, straight or upwardly curved and flat green phyllodes that are in length and wide.
The grey bark grey is mostly smooth but can become fissured longitudinally at the base of mature stems. The bright olive-green phyllodes have a linear to very narrowly elliptic shape. the blades are in length with a width of . It produces simple inflorescences simple with spikes scattered over plants with long golden flowers that are not densely arranged.
The wiry entangled shrub has a dense domed compact habit and typically has a height of and a width of . The branchlets have a twisted appearance with parallel ridges running along their length. Each phyllode is widely separated from the next. Phyllodes are around in length and long wide and have the same shape as the branchlets.
The multi-stemmed shrub typically grows to a height of and a width of and has a rounded or obconic habit. It can mature to a tree with a height of with a dense crown. The ribbed and resinous branchlets has resinous new shoots. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The shrub is wispy and spindly and typically grows to a height of . It is either single- stemmed or sparingly branched toward the base of the plant. The straight to slightly flexuose branchlets have resinous ribbing located at the subpendulous extremities. The slender yellow-green phyllodes are ascending and incurved with a quadrangular to subquadrangular shape.
The shrub is dense and spreading typically grows to a height of . It has grey to grey-red coloured minni ritchi style bark that peels backward in small rolls. The terete branchlets are matted with dense wolly hairs but become more glabrous as they mature. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The phyllodes have a length of and a width of and are covered in yellowish hairs that lie flat on the surface. They have one prominent nerve found near the dorsal margin and another two less prominent longitudinal nerves. It blooms between May and July producing golden flowers. The cylindrical flower-spikes are in length and densely packed with bright yellow flowers.
There are numerous scattered undefined dots and dashes of black scales irrorated with whitish. The hindwings are fuscous, thinly scaled and semitransparent towards base, darker posteriorly. The larvae have been recorded feeding on the phyllodes and in galls on Acacia species in Australia, and in New Zealand they have been reared from the foliage of Acacia longifolia, Acacia melanoxylon and Albizzia julibrissin.
The shrub or tree that typically grows a height of around and to a maximum height of and has an open to slightly pendulous habit. It has brown to grey coloured bark that is rough and stringy or longitudinally fissured. It has terete branchlets that are densely villous. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes instead of true leaves.
It is a rigid and prickly shrub that typically grows to a height of but can reach as high as . It can have a scrambling, sprawling or tangled erect habit. The shrub has ridged stems and curving spine-tipped phyllodes that form continuous wings along the stem. It produces globular, cream or yellow flowerheads between March to December in the species' native range.
Acacia scopulorum is a tree or large shrub growing to 5 m, whose branches sometimes sprawl. The branchlets are smooth, angular and dark red. The smooth phyllodes are narrow, spearblade- to sickle-shaped, and 7–11 cm long by 4.5–6 mm wide, with 8 to 14 longitudinal nerves. The gland is basal and the pulvinus is 1.5 to 2.5 mm long.
The grey-green and coriaceous phyllodes have a length of and a width of and have numerous fine nerves numerous and a prominent yellow coloured pulvinus. It blooms from August to October producing yellow flowers. The inflorescences occur in groups of one to four flower- spikes with a cylindrical shape. The spikes have a length of and a diameter of .
Acacia leptocarpa normally grows as a small tree, in height but can reach as high as , although it occasionally flowers as a shrub as low as tall. It has dark grey to almost black coloured bark of the ‘ironbark’ type. The angular branchlets are lenticellate and glabrous. The phyllodes have falcate shaped blades with a length of and a width of .
Snakewood grows as a bushy, spreading tree or shrub, usually with two or three main gnarled trunks. It can grow to a height of and a width of up to . The main branches usually appear to be contorted and widely spreading and have glabrous to sparingly finely pubescent branchlets. Like most Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The sprawling spreading shrub typically grows to a height of . The stems are covered in fine velvety, erect, spreading white hairs and stipules with a length of . The green phyllodes occur in whorls of 8 to 11 and are slightly flattened or straight with a length of and have an obscure adaxial nerve. It blooms from September to October and produces yellow flowers.
The thick phyllodes have an oblong-elliptic shape with a length of and a width of have three to five obscure longitudinal veins. The simple and axillary inflorescences occur is pairs or solitary with spherical yellow flower-heads. The dark brown seed pods that form after flowering are curved or twisted pod to a length of around and a width of .
Flowers and leaves Acacia saligna grows as a small, dense, spreading tree with a short trunk and a weeping habit. It grows up to eight metres tall. Like many Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves; these can be up to 25 centimetres long. At the base of each phyllode is a nectary gland, which secretes a sugary fluid.
The obconic shrub typically grows to high with slightly hairy branchlets with persistent narrowly triangular thickened stipules that are in length. It has phyllodes that are long and wide. They are erect and have an obliquely oval or elliptic shape with two or three raised main nerves. Yellow globular flowerheads appear from August to November in the species' native range.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a height of can grow to a height of around and usually has a weeping or erect to spreading habit. It has hard, fissured and deep grey coloured bark and glabrous branchlets. The wood of the tree has a scent similar to cut violets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
Acacia alcockii, also known as Alcock's wattle, is a shrub belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Phyllodineae endemic to South Australia. The suckering, bushy shrub typically grows to a height of . The glabrous branchlets are a dark reddish colour. The thin green phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to oblanceolate shape with a length of and a width of .
The shrub has a slender habit and typically grows to a height of with glabrous branchlets. It has persistent juvenile bipinnate leaves. It has green oblanceolate or narrowly oblong-elliptic shaped phyllodes with a length of and a width of . When it blooms it produces simple inflorescences of spherical flower-heads containing 20 to 35 cream to pale yellow coloured flowers.
The glabrous tree grows up to high, with short horizontal branches and pendulous branchlets covered in needle-like phyllodes adapted for the arid dry climate. It has a distinctive habit more similar to a sheoak or a conifer. The wood is extremely hard and dense with dark red coloured heartwood. The trunk and branches are covered with a fibrous grey-brown bark.
The shrub typically grows to a height of but can reach as high as and has glabrous branchlets. The crowded green phyllodes have a markedly inequilateral shape with a length of and a width of . When it blooms between late August and early October, it produces racemose inflorescences with spherical flower-heads that contain seven to nine golden coloured flowers.
The glabrous phyllodes have a length of and a width of and are thick with eight prominent nerves. It blooms from June to August and produces yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences occur in pairs in the axils and have an obloid to subglobular shape that is rarely cylindrical. They have a length of and a diameter of and are packed with golden flowers.
The spreading multi-stemmed tree or shrub typically grows to a height of and has a similar width. The branchlets have large resinous ribs with a blue-grey coloured resin coating new growth. The flat, green and straight to slightly curved phyllodes have a length of and a width of and have prominent nerves. It flowers from May to August producing yellow flowers.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a height of and produces yellow flowers from May to November. It has an erect or low spreading habit with ribbed and glabrous branchlets. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen and erect phylodes have a narrowly oblong-elliptic shape and are straight to shallowly incurved.
The rigid and glabrous phyllodes have a length of and a width of and have an acute to acuminate apex with 8 to 20 narrow nerves. It flowers from March to October producing yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences occur singly or in pairs found in the axils. The loosely obloid to cylindrically shaped flower-heads are in length and packed with golden flowers.
A. ramulosa is an erect, spreading and multi-branched shrub that typically grows to a height of . The ribbed glabrescent branchlets have small white hairs between the ribs, the resinous young tips are darker in colour. The phyllode bases can have resinous ribs with some red-glandular hairs. The erect, thick and linear phyllodes are usually in length and in width.
The tree or shrub typically grows to a height of and can have a spreading or erect habit. It has grey coloured bark that can have a smooth texture or be finely fissured. The glabrous branchlets are more or less terete and resinous becoming granular toward the apices. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The species was first formally described by the botanist John Lindley in 1838 as part of Thomas Mitchell's work Three Expeditions into the interior of Eastern Australia. It has many synonyms including Acacia acinacea var. acinacea and Racosperma acinaceum. The specific epithet, acinacea, derives from the Latin for a short Persian sword (acinaces) and references the shape of the phyllodes.
The shrub typically grows to a height of to around wide and has a tangled appearance. The branchlets tha caducous deltate stipules. The evergreen phyllodes have an obovate or suborbicular shape are usually asymmetrical with a length of and a width of . The inflorescences occur on twinned or solitary flower-spikes with an oblong or cylindrical shape and a length of .
Mulga woodland in Southwestern Queensland. The tallest trees in this photograph are close to 7 m. Acacia aneura branch with seed pods Acacia aneura bark Mulga trees are highly variable, in form, in height, and in shape of phyllodes and seed pods. They can form dense forests up to high, or small, almost heath-like low shrubs spread well apart.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a height of and has an erect to speading habit. It has finely or deeply fissured bark that is usually a dark grey colour. The glabrous branchlets are more or less terete and occasionally covered in a fine white powdery coating. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The tree typically grows to a height of Arthur Lee Jacobson Plant of the Month and is able to form suckers. It has furrowed bark with a rough texture that is dark brown to black in colour. It has glabrous branchlets that are sometimes pendulous or angular or flattened at extremities. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
Acacia brachycarpa is a shrub belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Phyllodineae endemic to Queensland. The shrub has a mompact and much-branched habit that typically grows to a height of less than . The sparsely to moderately hirsutellous branchlets have long stipules. The pungent, rigid, flat, linear to linear-triangular shaped phyllodes have a midrib on each face .
The shrub has an erect to spreading habit and typically grows to a height of but reach as a high as . The sparsely hairy branchlets are slightly resinous. The often subcrowded, slender, slightly incurved to straight phyllodes are usually patent to ascending and have a length of and a width of . It blooms from June to October and produces yellow flowers.
On the upper margin approx. 2–4 mm (<10) from the base of the phyllode a conspicuous, small, oval shaped gland is present. Inflorescence occurs mostly in spring in axillary racemes longer than the phyllodes, consisting of 10-15 bright yellow globular flowers resulting in seed pods that are flat and narrowly oblong 2.5-4.5 cm long and 7–11 mm wide.
The prostrate spinescent shrub typically grows to a height of and can form dense intricate mats. The short, spiny and straight branchlets are either obscurely ribbed or ribless. The green glabrous phyllodes are straight to shallowly incurved and have a length of and a width of and have an obscure midrib. It blooms from August to October and produces yellow flowers.
The pungent glabrous phyllodes are in length and wide and have five main nerves and a prominent mid-rib. It blooms and produces simple inflorescences that occur singly in the axils. The spherical flower-heads contain 8 to 12 loosely pack golden flowers. The shallowly curved, red-brown seed pods that form after flowering are to in length and have a diameter of .
The spreading, intricate pungent shrub typically grows to a height of . It has coarsely or sharply pungent branchlets that can be glabrous or quite hairy and covered with a fine white powder at the extremities. Like most species of Acacia it has [phyllode s rather than true leaves. The ascending to erect and pungent phyllodes have an inequilateral wedge-shaped to obtriangular shape.
The erect, glabrous, spinescent and straggly shrub typically grows to a height of . The yellowish-green to reddish-brown branchlets are slightly flattened and have smooth thin brown coloured bark. The evergreen flat dull phyllodes have a rhomboid-orbicular shape and are up to in length and width and have one prominent major vein. It blooms between June and October forming yellow flowers.
The distant grey-green phyllodes resemble the stems and are ascending to erect with a length of and a width of and sometimes have a hooked appearance. It blooms from July to September and produces yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences occur in pairs of groups of four an short racemes. The spherical flower-heads contain 6 to 11 golden coloured flowers.
The erect slender and open shrub typically grows to a height of . The prominently yellow-ribbed branchlets have pungent and hardened stipules with a length of . The thin evergreen phyllodes have an obliquely lanceolate to ovate shape and are usually in length with a width of . They are narrowed at base and have two to four prominent longitudinal nerves on the face.
The evergreen phyllodes have an elliptic to oblanceolate shape that can be slightly recurved. Each phyllode is in length and wide with a thick leathery texture and have a prominent midrib and marginal nerves. It blooms from July to August and produces yellow flowers. The spherical inflorescences flower-heads have a diameter of containing 50 to 80 densely packed golden flowers.
The species was first formally described by the botanist George Bentham in 1864 as part of the work Flora Australiensis. It was reclassified as Racosperma harpophyllum by Leslie Pedley and transferred back the genus Acacia in 2001. The type specimen was collected from around Rockhampton. The specific epithet is in reference to the falcate shape of the phyllodes on the tree.
The open spreading shrub typically grows to a height of . It has branchlets that are covered in matted hair or with hairs embedded in resin giving them a cobweb-like appearance. The branchlets also have persistent stipules with a narrowly triangular shape and a length of up to . Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
Acacia pycnantha, most commonly known as the golden wattle, is a tree of the family Fabaceae native to southeastern Australia. It grows to a height of and has phyllodes (flattened leaf stalks) instead of true leaves. Sickle-shaped, these are between long, and wide. The profuse fragrant, golden flowers appear in late winter and spring, followed by long seed pods.
Sandplain wattle grows as a tall shrub or small tree typically to a height of but can grow as tall as . It is able to form suckers and form dense colonies. It has glabrous branchlets that are often covered in a fine white powdery coating giving it frosted appearance. Like most Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The phyllodes have a length of and a width of and contain many fine, rather closely packed veins, with two or three that are more prominent. The simple inflorescences occur in pairs on racemes. The cylindrical flower-spikes have a length of and is sub-densely packed with golden flowers. Following flowering firmly chartaceous to thinly coriaceous and glabrous seed pods form.
The shrub to tree typically grows to a height of and has finely corrugated bark that fissures at the base. The angled stout branchlets are light or dark grey or red-brown and often have distinct lenticels. The evergreen phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic shape that gradually tapers both ends. They are usually in length and wide and have three prominent main nerves.
The shrub is hard, prickly with intricate branching that typically grows to a height of and a width of around with grey, slightly roughened bark on the stem and branches. The green glabrous branches are flexuose. The phyllodes form opposite wings along the length of the branchlets. Each dull green wing is continued to the one below and are about across.
The shrub can have a prostrate, straggling or erect and slender habit and has a rush like appearance. It typically grows to a height of but can grow as high as . The branches are slender and wiry as well as finely striated with yellow ribs. The phyllodes have a continuous, thin, horizontally flattened, narrowly triangular scale-like appearance and are only in length.
The tree can grow to a height of . The young branchlets are densely haired with the hairs obscuring ribs. It has straight and flat evergreen phyllodes that are around in length and wide that are also covered in hair while still immature. It flowers in early summer between November and December producing solitary axillary inflorescences with long cylindrically shaped yellow flowerheads.
The low spreading, viscid shrub typically grows to a height of . The obscurely ribbed branches normally spread horizontally giving the shrub a flat-topped appearance. The green to grey-green phyllodes are solitary or sometimes in clusters of two or three at the nodes. Each phyllode is in length and has a diameter of about and are straight or curve shallowly upward.
It blooms from October to December and produces yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences forms singly or in pairs in the axil of the phyllodes supported on hairy peduncles that are long. The flowers are heads globose holding 5 to 16-flowers that are in diameter. Seed pods form later that are curved or coiled and mostly flat except where raised over seeds.
Acacia setulifera is a shrub of the genus Acacia and the subgenus Plurinerves. It is native to an area in the Northern Territory and the Kimberley region of Western Australia. The bushy, dense and resinous shrub typically grows to a height of and produces bright yellow flowers. The phyllodes are elliptic or ovate, often slightly curved and undulate, long, wide.
The phyllodes are glabrous with minute, red to brown coloured trichomes with three prominent longitudinal nerves. It blooms from September to October producing short cylindrical flower-spikes that are in length and quite densely flowered. Following flowering in around December tightly coiled seed pods form that are around and wide and are brown in colour with a thinly coriaceous texture.
The shrub typically grows to a height of . The erect, pale green, slender phyllodes are straight to curved with a length of and a diameter of . It blooms from February to September and produces yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences occur as two per axil with spherical flower-heads that have a diameter of contain 8 to 17 loosely grouped golden flowers.
Acacia binervia grows as a shrub to small tree anywhere from high. The bark is dark brown to grey in colour, and the elliptic to sickle-shaped (falcate) phyllodes are in length and wide. The cylindrical yellow flowers appear in spring (August to October). Flowering is followed by the development of 6–8 cm long seed pods, which are ripe by December.
The tree typically grows to a maximum height of and has a slender with a whitish-greyish coating. It has ribbony or flaky bark that is a red-brown to brownish colour. The angular red-brown or brown coloured glabrous branchlets become flattened towards the apex and have a white powdery coating. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The shrub tree typically grows to a maximum height of with a single stem and a rounded top. It has smooth grey coloured bark that becomes rough and fibrous with age. The flattened and stout glabrous branchlets are mostly angular and a brownish crimson colour often with a fine white powdery coating. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather that true leaves.
The shrub typically grows to a maximum height of around and has multiple stems. It has grey to maroon coloured minni ritchi style bark. The sub-glabrous or silky haired branchlets are angular towards the apices and a maroon-grey colour with young shoots that have fine yellow hairs close to the stem. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a height of and a maximum height of and has a single stem with an erect to spreading habit. It has dark greyish brown to black coloured bark on the trunk which is corrugated. The glabrous or appressed-hairy branchlets are angled towards the apices. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The tree typically grows to a height of and has rough, furrowed and shaggy looking brown bark. The angular branchlets have a yellowish tinge explaining the common name. The evergreen phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to lanceolate shape and are in length and wide. When it blooms it produces axillary inflorescences with globular flowerheads with a diameter of containing 30 to 60 cream coloured flowers.
The straight and flat phyllodes have a linear shape that tapers gradually towards the base but barely taper near the apex, they have a length of and a width of and a prominent midvein. It blooms between June and July producing golden flowers. The cylindrical flower-spikes occur singly or in pairs and have a length of and are packed with golden coloured flowers.
Each phyllode is smooth or has fine silky hairs with several obscure parallel veins and occasionally a more prominent midvein tapering to a stiff point. The phyllodes narrow to a short curved lined stalk. The inflorescence consists of 14-22 pale yellow to bright yellow flowers long and appear in pairs in the phyllode axis. The flower stalks are long covered in fine hairs.
The phyllodes have two to three prominent fine longitudinal nerves that are widely spaced. The flower-spikes are found occurring in pairs and are found on shoots located on the upper axils. The spikes are and loosely packed with golden yellow flowers. The straight seed pods that form after flowering are in length and around wide with convex valves over the seeds and prominent marginal nerves.
The multi-stemmed tree or shrub typically to a height of and has a rounded bushy habit. It has light to dark grey coloured bark that is longitudinally fissured and forms small flakes. The terete branchlets are densely to sparsely puberulous and have broadly triangular dark brown stipules with a length of around . The green, narrowly elliptically shaped phyllodes are flat and straight to shallowly incurved.
The shiny dark brown to black seeds within the pods are arranged longitudinally and have a length of around with a large yellow-orange aril. A. leptocarpa resembles Acacia cowleana and Acacia elachantha but has glabrous and thinner phyllodes and longer, more curved pods. It is thought to be allied with Acacia tropica and Acacia cretata. The seed pods appear very similar to those of Acacia gardneri.
These are greyish-green in colour, straight and flat, between in length and wide. The hairy phyllodes are acuminate with a fine curved and innocuous point that is not rigid and have many closely parallel indistinct nerves. It blooms between August and November producing rudimentary inflorescences. The flowers are yellow, and held in spherical clusters that are about in diameter and contain 20 to 25 golden flowers.
The phyllodes are spreading and incurved, they are grooved on upper surface and have a length if and a width of . It blooms from March to October and produces yellow flowers. The obloid to spherical flower- heads contain 30 to 40 flowers. After flowering crustaceous to coriceous seed pods for that have a broadly linear shape and are more or less flat and curved.
Acacia binata is a shrub belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Phyllodineae endemic to Western Australia. The dense, domed and spreading shrub typically grows to a height of . The fleshy, flat, green phyllodes are slightly depressed to planoconvex in shape with a length of and a width of with three obscure nerves. It blooms from August to October and produces yellow flowers.
The dull green phyllodes are sometimes continuous with the branchlet but are more often articulate,. They are quadrangular with a length of approximately sometimes as long as with a width of about . It is a very slow growing species and can live up to 200 years. Sapling and juvenile trees have a conifer like habit and can take 3 years to reach a height of .
The species was first described by the botanist Leslie Pedley in 1969 as part of the work Notes on Acacia, chiefly from Queensland as published in Contributions from the Queensland Herbarium. It was reclassified as Racosperma saxicola in 1987 by Pedley then transferred back to genus Acacia in 2001. The shrub resembles both Acacia ulicifolia and Acacia brachycarpa but has wider phyllodes and shorter flower stalks.
The weeping tree or tall bushy shrub typically grows to a height of . with the ultimate branchlets and phyllodes have a pendulous habit. It can have a single or many stems and can form a large crowns when growing in favourable conditions. It has hard dark grey coloured bark that is furrowed on main stems but becomes smooth and light grey on the upper branches.
Hop mulga is a spreading or erect shrubby tree that typically grows to a height of but can grow as tall as . It has corky bark, scurfy branchlets with resinous ribs and dark red-brown coloured new shoots. Like most Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. These are thick and bluish green in colour with a length of and a width of .
Miniritchie grows is a shrubby tree to a height of and a width of and has a many branched, rounded or flat topped habit. It typically has several main stems. These are often twisted, and are always covered in distinctive red to brown coloured minni ritchi bark, which peels in small curly flakes. Like most Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The phyllodes have three to five prominent longitudinal nerves. It blooms between March and August producing cylindrical flower-spikes in groups of up to five in the axils. The flower-spikes have a length of that are loosely packed with pale yellow to cream-coloured flowers. Following flowering woody and glabrous seed pods form that have a narrowly oblanceolate to linear shape and are basally narrowed.
The tree has a variety of growth habits across Australia, although in Western Australia it typically grows to a height of . It can have one or many main trunks from the base and open or wispy crowns. The stems and branches have grey bark that is longitudinally fissured on the trunk. The straight or shallowly curved phyllodes are a dull green to grey- green in colour.
The phyllodes are around in length and have a width of and have a knob shaped mucro. The rudimentary inflorescences occur in pairs in the racemes and have a axes length of . The golden flower spikes are in length with hairy petals. The seed pods that form later are openly and strongly curved or tightly and irregularly coiled or twisted with twisted dehisced valves.
Like many Acacia species, it has thick-skinned phyllodes. These are optimised for low water loss, with a high oil content, sunken stomata, and a profusion of tiny hairs which reduce transpiration. During dry periods, mulgas drop much of their foliage to the ground, which provides an extra layer of mulch and from where the nutrients can be recycled. Like most Australian Acacia species, mulga is thornless.
Acacia acanthaster is a shrub belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Phyllodineae. It is native to an area in the Great Southern and Goldfields- Esperance regions of Western Australia. The prostrate, sprawling and spiny shrub typically grows to a height of and a width of . The phyllodes are flat and linear with a length of and wide and narrow toward the base.
If there is growth, it will be indicated by areas of redness. If globular clusters do not appear, the phyllodes that are already produced will continue to grow in an alternating pattern. The fruits of the zig-zag wattle are the black pods that have lima-bean-like structure that are found on the plant. The pods are small, curved and have a smooth exterior casing.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Bruce Maslin in 2008 as part of the work New taxa of Acacia (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae) and notes on other species from the Pilbara and adjacent desert regions of Western Australia as published in the journal Nuytsia. The specific epithet is derived from the Latin words meaning very small in reference to the size of the phyllodes.
The spreading bushy shrub typically grows to a height of and wide. It often has a dense domed habit and has white waxy hairy branchlets. The phyllodes have an obliquely orbicular to obdeltate shape with a length of and a width of with two fine, divergent, longitudinal nerves located on each face. It blooms from July to September and produces white-cream-yellow flowers.
The low, spreading and pungent shrub typically grows to a height of . It has multiple glabrous stems with light grey coloured branchlets that are a reddish colour toward the extremities and has persistent stipules that are in length. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The grey-green pyhllodes are dimorphic on the upper branches and are in width.
The shrub or tree can grow to a maximum height of and usually has a spindly habit. It has dark brown to black to grey coloured bark that is smooth on younger trees but becomes longitudinally fissured as it ages. The plant has terete and densely haired branchlets with very conspicuous stipules. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The low dense spreading shrub typically grows to a height of and to a width of about . It usually has multiple stems and can have few branches a ground level and has smooth, grey bark that can be fissured at the very base of the main stems. The branchlets have resinous ribbing. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The ascending to erect evegreen phyllodes are straight to shallowly incurved with a length of and a diameter of and have eight obscure nerves. It blooms from August to September and produces yellow flowers. It is native to an area in the Goldfields-Esperance and the Wheatbelt regions of Western Australia where it is commonly situated on low rises and plains growing in gravelly sandy soils.
It grows typically grows to a height of in height and has an erect to spreading habit. It has smooth, grey or grey-brown coloured bark on the trunk and larger branches. The branchlets have low longitudinal green to brown coloured ridges that alternate with sticky resinous bands. The green linear to narrowly elliptic phyllodes are slightly curved and have a length of and a width .
The bushy erect pungent shrub typically grows to a height of with branchlets that are ribbed, glabrous or sparsely appressed-puberulous with straight hairs. Stipules are present only on young fresh shoots. The trunk and branches have smooth green or brown bark. The leathery leaves have phyllodes or are sessile, patent to ascending, inequilateral basally, subulate-linear, elliptic in shape and straight to recurved.
The phyllodes, appearing like leaves, are light to blue green, usually linear- oblong, slightly curved, 3–10 cm long and 4-10mm wide, thick and hairless, and wrinkled during dry periods. They have a prominent yellowish mid-vein, lateral veins not apparent.The Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain Trust. PlantNET - The Plant Information Network System of The Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain Trust, Sydney, Australia.
The thinly coriaceous and glabrous phyllodes have a length of and a width of with three prominent longitudinal veins. It blooms between December and July producing golden flowers. It produces cylindrically shaped inflorescences with the flower-spikes found singly or in groups of two or three in the upper axils. the spikes have a length of and have bright to golden yellow coloured flowers.
The glabrous phyllodes are in length and wide with three obscure or subprominent longitudinal veins. It blooms between September and March producing yellow flowers. The cylindrically shaped axillary flower- spikes mostly occur in pair and are in length and packed with golden yellow flowers. After flowering linear, thinly coriaceous seed pods form that resemble a string of beads and are in length and wide with fine striations.
The shrub has erect and slender or scrambling habit and typically grows to a height of and a width of around . It forms a woody base stem over time. The phyllodes are continuous with branchlets, forming opposing wings with each one extending to the next one below. Each grey-green wings has a typical width of but can get to and are usually glabrous.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a height of but can reach over at times. Like many other species of Acacia in the "Mulga group" it has an appearance that resembles a conifer. The branchlets have resinous ribs with white appressed and red-glandular hairs. The flat straight to curved green to grey-green phyllodes have a width of around and a length of up to .
They are in length and wide. The phyllodes tend to be sub-rigid, coarsely pungent, glabrous and have parallel nerves. It blooms between October and November and produces simple inflorescences composed of loosely packed flower-spikes that are in length. The sub-woody seed pods that form later resemble a string of beads and are curved to irregularly twisted with a length of and a width of .
The phyllodes have a length of and a diameter and have thin longitudinal nerves with short soft hairs in between. The simple inflorescences mostly occur singly in the axils as cylindrical flower-spikes with a length of . Following flowering brown and straight seed pods with an oblong shape form. The pods have a length of and a width of and are cartilaginous with longitudinal reticulated nerves.
The rigid silvery-green to grey-green phyllodes have a length of and a width of and are innocuous or coarsely pungent. It blooms from January to December producing yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences occur singly or in pairs in the axils. The spherical to obloid shaped flower-heads have a length of and a width of and are densley packed with golden flowers.
The shrub or tree has tough fibrous bark and typically grows to a height of . The bark is shaggy and stringy on the trunk with minni ritchi style bark of the outer branches. When new shoots form they are viscid and a bright yellow-green colour. The ascending greyish green phyllodes are filiform and gently curved with a length of and a diameter of .
The open often weeping tree or shrub typically grows to a height of , although some specimens may reach 25 m. It blooms from July to October producing yellow flowers. The leaf-like phyllodes are and gently curving, each terminating in a hooked point. The inflorescences are simple, sometimes with a few rudimentary racemes interspersed with axes that are in length with paired peduncles paired that are long.
Acacia kimberleyensis is a shrub belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Juliflorae that is endemic to parts of north western Australia. The erect, viscid shrub typically grows to a height of . It has glabrous and slender branchlets that are finely ribbed and resinous when young. The flat green phyllodes have a narrowly linear shape with a length of and a width of .
The tree or shrub typically grows to a height of but can sometimes reach up to . It has rough, corky and fissured bark with pendulous brittle branchlets. The green to yellowish green to grey green phyllodes have an oblanceolate to narrowly oblanceolate shape and are straight to shallowly recurved. Each phyllode has a length of and a width of and has three distant main nerves.
The phyllodes have three to five prominent, raised nerves. The flowers-spikes produced are in length with pale to bright yellow flowers. The seed pods that form after flowering are flat with a linear-oblanceolate shape and around in length and wide. The glaborus, thick, coriaceous to thinly woody pods have oblique nerves and are crusted in resin and open elastically from the apex.
The shrub or small tree typically grows to a height of with minni-ritchi bark and yellow flowers. The silvery coloured branchlets have small silky hairs. The silvery to grey-green phyllodes have a linear to shallowly incurved shape. Each phyllode has a length of and a width of and also are covered with silky hairs and seven to nine raised nerves on each face.
The shrub or tree has a bushy habit and typically grows to a height of less than but can reach as high as . The shrub often has over four primary erect branches that diverge at the base. The terete brown-green to brown branchlets are ribbed and hairy. It has elliptic or occasionally ovate-elliptic shaped phyllodes with a length of and a width of .
The evergreen tree or shrub typically grows to a height of and a width of up to . It often has an erect to spreading habit with flattened or angled branchlets towards the apices. The branchlets are finely haired with silvery white hairs that can be yellowish on young shoots and are often covered in a fine white powder. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
In Fine-needle aspiration (FNA) smears, only 57% of cases show ductal carcinoma and metaplastic components. Consequently, roughly half of MCB tumors cannot be diagnosed by FNA. Pathologic tissue diagnosis is therefore essential to distinguish MCB from other breast cancers in order to institute proper and prompt treatment. This is achieved using immunohistochemistry with a cytokeratin panel to distinguish such cases from phyllodes tumors, primary sarcomas, and fibromatoses.
In clasping or decurrent leaves, the blade partially surrounds the stem. When the leaf base completely surrounds the stem, the leaves are said to be perfoliate, such as in Eupatorium perfoliatum. In peltate leaves, the petiole attaches to the blade inside the blade margin. In some Acacia species, such as the koa tree (Acacia koa), the petioles are expanded or broadened and function like leaf blades; these are called phyllodes.
The evergreen and coriaceous phyllodes are often covered in scale and have a narrowly elliptic to linear shape and are straight to subfalcate. they have a length of and a width of and have a prominent midnerve and a single much less prominent nerve on either side. It blooms between April and October producing bright yellow flowers. The flowers are found on flower-spikes that are in length.
The phyllodes are pungent and have three nerves, the middle one being the most prominent. When it blooms it produces simple inflorescences with interrupted cylindrical flower-spikes that have a length of containing pale yellow to almost lemon yellow coloured flowers. After flowering seed podd form that are linear to curved and irregularly constricted between each seed. The pods are in length and wide and contain elliptic shaped seeds.
Eusocial thrips appear to satisfy these requirements. Gall thrips maintain galls around Acacia phyllodes, a singular and vast resource for them, satisfying the first criterion. The prevalence of other, aggressive, parasitic thrips species (Koptothrips) with known instances of hostile takeover and killing of gall thrips indicates strong selection for defense. The final criterion is satisfied by soldier micropterous thrips with large barbed forelegs that assist them in defending against episodic attacks.
The multi-stemmed and obconic shrub crowns sparse to sub-dense and typically grows to a height of with a width of . Bark on the upper branches is smooth and grey but becomes rough and longitudinally fissured at the base. It has light green new shoots with rudimentary caducous stipules that are resinous but not sticky. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The Wanderrie wattle grows as a spreading shrub or tree with many stems typically to a height of but can reach over . It has furrowed, usually grey or brown coloured bark and terete, glabrous terete branchlets that are slightly scurfy. Like most Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. These are a bright green to grey-green or blue-green colour, flat, up to around in length and wide.
Acacia stigmatophylla, also known as djulurd, is a shrub belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Juliflorae the is endemic to northern parts of Western Australia. The shrub typically grows to a height of and has smooth dark grey coloured bark. The glabrous, angular to flattened branchlets have red-brown to light brown colour and have resinous ridges. The straight, green phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to oblanceolate shape.
Curara grows as a tall shrub or small tree up to a height of and has an intricate and often straggly habit with glaborus branchlets. Like most Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. These are slender and needle-like with a length of up and a width of . When young they are soft and pliable, but as they mature they become hard, rigid and very sharp.
The bush or tree typically grows to a maximum height of and has smooth grey bark on the main stem and branched with more yellowish coloured bark on the upper branches. It can have an open an straggly a sometimes dense habit. The glabrous branchlets are often covered in a fine white powdery coating and have spinose stipules. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The species was first formally described by the botanist George Bentham in 1842 in the work Notes on Mimoseae, with a synopsis of species. as published in London Journal of Botany. There are two recognised synonyms for A. baxteri; Acacia bagsteri as described by George Bentham and Racosperma baxteri as described by Leslie Pedley. It is closely related to Acacia andrewsii and has phyllodes that are quite similar to Acacia unifissilis.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has glabrous branchlets with a white frosted appearance. It has green phyllodes with a narrowly elliptic to oblanceolate shape and a length of and a width of . When it blooms around August it produces spherical flower-heads containing 20 to 30 yellow flowers. The seed pods that form after flowering reach a length of up to and a width of .
Acacia subulata, commonly known as awl-leaf wattle, is a shrub endemic to New South Wales in Australia. The species grows to between 1 and 4 metres high and has phyllodes that measure 6 to 14 cm long and 0.8 to 1.5 mm wide. These are straight or slightly curved . The globular yellow flowerheads appear in racemes (groups of 3 to 11) in the phyllode axils predominantly from June to December.
The resinous shrub typically grows to a height of and has sparsely hairy and terete branchlets that are yellowish to light brown in colour that become darker toward the base. It has inequilaterally obtriangular-obovate to widely obovate-obdeltate green phyllodes. It blooms between August and October but can appear as late as March. It produces simple inflorescences of spherical flower-heads containing 12 to 15 bright yellow flowers.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a height of and has a straggly to willowy habit. It has branchlets that are covered in short velvety hairs. The green patent to erect phyllodes have a narrowly oblong to narrowly elliptic shape and gave a length of and a width of with a prominent midrib. When it blooms it produces inflorescences in groups of 10 to 20 along racemes that are long.
The papery to slightly coriaceous phyllodes have two to four prominent main nerves that are concurrent with each other. It blooms from May to August producing yellow flowers. The cylindrical flower-spikes are in length and packed with golden coloured flowers. After flowering densely haired seed pods form that are tightly coiled in masses with a length of around and a width of with longitudinally arranged seeds inside.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Ferdinand von Mueller in 1863 as part of the work Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae. It was reclassified as Racosperma subtilinerve by Leslie Pedley in 2003 then returned to genus Acacia in 2006. The specific epithet is in reference to the very fine nveins found in the phyllodes. The type specimen was collected by Ferdinand von Mueller from the hills around Mount Imlay.
Its branchlets lack any hair or are covered with minute soft erect hairs. The many phyllodes are spirally arranged or irregularly whorled. Their dimensions are : 2.5–12 mm long, and 0.4–0.7 mm wide The inflorescences are simple with one globular flower head per axil, with 16 to 27 creamy white or golden flowers. The blackish pods are narrow and about 5 cm long and 7 to 15 mm wide.
It is useful for securing uninhabited sand in coastal areas, primarily where there are not too many hard frosts. In Tasmania the ripening pods were roasted and the seeds removed and eaten. Young galls of Trichilogaster acaciaelongifoliae, still showing the branch morphology of the galled buds. One of the phyllodes already seems to be showing stress and might be expected to drop within a few weeks or months.
Acacia clunies-rossiae, commonly known as kowmung wattle or kanangra wattle, is a shrub belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Phyllodineae that is endemic to New South Wales. The erect to spreading shrub typically grows to a height of . It blooms from August to November and produces bright yellow flowers. The green phyllodes have a small point at the tip and are in length and have a width of .
It grows as a resinous, multi-stemmed shrub or small tree, in height, with grey or reddish-brown minni ritchi bark. The plant normally has a V shaped form with a openly branched spreading crown at times with sparse foliage present. The evergreen phyllodes have an elliptic to obovate shape and are slightly asymmetrical. The blade is in length and wide and has three to five main longitudinal nerves.
The erect dense shrub typically grows to a height of . It is often has multiple slender stems and has a woody rootstock with hairy branchlets and narrowly triangular stipules with a length of . It has green elliptic to broadly elliptic or obovate shaped phyllodes with a length of and a width of and prominent midrib and marginal nerves. It blooms from March to September and produces white-cream-yellow flowers.
The erect, compact, dense and spreading shrub typically grows to a height and width of . The branchlets have bright greenish yellow hairs with white hairs on the penultimate branchlets. It has oblanceolate shaped silvery blue-grey phyllodes with a length of and a width of . The shrub produces racemose inflorescences that have a axis covered in dense, appressed, greenish golden hairs containing 25 to 45 flowers per head .
Acacia poliochroa is a shrub belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Phyllodineae that is endemic to south western Australia. The prostrate to occasionally erect shrub typically grows to a height of and has a dense domed habit with puberulous branchlets. the green phyllodes are straight to shallowly incurved and rarely flat with a length of and a width of . It blooms from September to October and produces yellow flowers.
The erect slender shrub or tree typically grows to a height of . The hairy branchlets have pale yellow new shoots that age to a silvery colour due to indumentum. The thin, smooth, grey-green phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to narrowly oblong shape with a length of and a width of and have a prominent midrib and marginal nerves. It blooms from June to September and produces yellow flowers.
The evergreen phyllodes are straight to shallowly curved and quadrangular or flat with a length of and a width of and are smooth, pungent, glabrous, rigid and pungent with five main nerves. It blooms from April to September and produces yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences usually occur singly in the axils on stalks that are in length. The showy spherical flower-heads contain 13 to 50 bright yellow flowers.
The shrub typically grows to a height of . It has ribbed glabrous branchlets with new shoots that are minutely woolly and with caducous stipules with a length of . The pungent linear green phyllodes are attenuate at both ends and commonly inequilateral and have a length of and a width of with two or three main nerves per face. It blooms from August to September and produces yellow flowers.
The sparsely hairy to glabrous phyllodes have ciliate margins with three main longitudinal veins. The pale yellow globular flower-heads have a diameter of and contain 10 to 25 flowers and appear singly or in pairs in the leaf axils between July and October in the species' native range. The papery, straight, flat seed pods are slightly raised over seeds with a length of and a width of .
It is an erect or spreading shrub growing to a height of . Its branchlets are smooth and angle towards the apices. The phyllodes are very narrowly elliptic to linear with a pointed sharp tip, and 1.5–5 cm by 1–3 mm wide. The 2 or 3 longitudinal veins are prominent. There is an inconspicuous gland 0–3 mm above the base, and the pulvinus is less than 1 mm long.
The grey-green and terete phyllodes have a length of and a diameter of and are hairy in the furrows between the nerves. There are usually eight wide and flat topped nerves per face. It flowers from June to August producing spherical yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences usually occur in pairs in the axils and have spherical flower-heads with a diameter of and contain 10 to 22 golden coloured flowers.
Acacia hopperiana is a small tree or shrub belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Juliflorae that is endemic to western Australia. The shrub or occasionally a tree typically grows to a height of and has smooth grey bark. It often has a dense habit with red-brown coloured glabrous branchlets that are silvery between the fine ribs. The terete, pungent, light green phyllodes are in length and wide.
Acacia intorta is a shrub or tree belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Juliflorae that is endemic to arid parts of central Western Australia. The tree has a gnarled appearance and typically grows to a height of with fissured and fibrous grey coloured bark. It has contorted main branches and tend to spread horizontally and has glabrous branchlets. The erect, evergreen phyllodes are straight and most often terete.
The spindly erect shrub typically grows to a height of . It has smooth brown bark and flattened tawny yellow or brown glabrous branchlets that are The thin green obliquely narrowly lanceolate to elliptic phyllodes have a length of and a width of with three to five conspicuous, longitudinal nerves. It blooms from May and July to August or October producing yellow flowers. The golden flower-spikes are around in length.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a height of and can be found to . It has terete and glabrous branchlets with many red, resinous micro-hairs. Phyllodes are spreading to erect with leaves that are linear, narrowly elliptic or narrowly oblong-elliptic shape that is straight to recurved, terete to flat, in length and wide. Leaves are hairy when young, becoming hairless, edges smooth, with a straight often sharp point.
The shrub usually has a single stem and typically grows to a height of around and has smooth grey bark and an openly branched habit. It has villous new shoots with lemon yellow hairs. The terete branchlets are only slightly flattened toward the extremities and can be sparsely or densely hairy with silver coloured hairs and have long stipules. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The glabrous phyllodes are not rigid and acuminate to a delicate tip and finely striated with a prominent central nerve. The rudimentary inflorescences rudimentary occur in pairs of flower spikes that are in length and a diameter of composed of pale yellow flowers. The glabrous, flat, linear seed pods are slightly constricted between the seeds. the pods are up to in length and wide and firmly chartaceous to thinly coriaceous.
The erect open pungent shrub typically grows to a height of but can be as tall as and has smooth grey bark. The phyllodes are rigid and erect, olive green and clustered towards the ends of the branches. They are narrowly oblong to oblanceolate in shape with a pungent smell growing to long and wide with 14 to 16 prominent nerves. It blooms from August to September and produces yellow flowers.
After flowering linear, straight seed pods form that resemble a string of beads. The chartaceous, pubescent pods dry to a brown colour and are in length. The brown seeds found within the pods are arranged longitudinally and have a length of . Acacia arafurica is distinguished from A. sublanata by its thicker and larger phyllodes, its longer peduncles, and its inflorescences arranged in the form of a spike (spicate).
The shrub has an erect to spreading habit and typically grows to a height of and has reddish brown branchlets. The linear phyllodes have an oblanceolate to elliptic shape and are straight or slightly curved with a length of and a width of . It blooms between July and December and produces inflorescences with bright to pale yellow flowers. The inflorescence occur as 6 to 21 racemes along an axis of .
The shrub or tree has an erect to bushy habit and typically grows to a height of and has lightly fissured brown bark. It has narrowly elliptic to oblanceolate shaped reddish to grey-green leathery phyllodes that have a length of and a width of . The juvenile foliage is pinnate and can persist on older plants. It blooms between July and November producing inflorescences with pale to bright yellow flowers.
Mormolyce phyllodes can reach a length of . These beetles possess a flat leaf-shaped, shiny black or brown body with distinctive violin- shaped translucent elytra (hence the common name). This characteristic mimicry protects them against predators, while their flat shaped body allow them to dwell in soil cracks or under the bark and leaves of trees. Head and pronotum are very elongated, with long antennae and the legs are long and slender.
The erect, thick, evergreen phyllodes have a linear shape with a length of and a width of with longitudinal striations and around 25 closely parallel veins. It blooms between August and September producing golden flowers. The obloid flower-spikes are around in length packed with golden coloured flowers. After flowering firmly chartaceous seed pods form that are flat and have a linear shape with reasonably straight sides but slightly constricted between seeds.
There may be swollen regions at either end of the petiole known as pulvina (singular=pulvinus) that are composed of a flexible tissue that allows leaf movement. Pulvina are common in the bean family Fabaceae and the prayer plant family Marantaceae. A pulvinus on a petiolule is called a pulvinulus. In some plants, the petioles are flattened and widened, to become phyllodes or phyllodia, or cladophylls and the true leaves may be reduced or absent.
Acacia simsii is a smooth shrub which grows to a height of 1 to 4 metres. The phyllodes are linear to narrowly elliptic, straight (sometimes incurved) and 5–14 cm long, 2–7 mm wide. They have pointed tips and are leathery, with 3 or 4 main nerves and few longitudinal minor nerves in between. There is a gland 0–2 mm above the pulvinus, and up to five others along the adaxial margin.
Acacia koaia is usually distinguished by growing as a short (rarely more than ), broad, gnarled tree; having the seeds longitudinally arranged in the pod; shorter, straighter phyllodes; and much denser wood. A population on the northern coast of Kauai may be intermediate, but the relationships have not been worked out. Koaia wood is claimed to be very different from that of koa, and this may be the best character to separate them.
The glabrous phyllodes are quite inequilateral with an obdeltate shape with a length of and a width of . It produces racemes of ball-shaped yellow flowers in winter and spring. The prolific inflorescences have spherical flower-heads with a diamter of containing 8 to 12 golden coloured flowers. Following flowering firmly chartaceous and glabrous seed pods form that have a narrowly oblong shape with a length of up to and a width of .
The glabrous phyllodes are in length and and have a prominent midvein. It generally blooms between June and September producing simple inflorescences that occur in pairs in the axils and have spherical flower- heads with a diameter of and contain four to eight loosely packed bright yellow flowers. The firmly papery to thinly leathery seed pods that form after flowering are straight to strongly curved with a length of and a width of .
The shrub is usually multistemmed with an obconic habit and typically grows to a height of shrub or it rarely is seen as a tree up to around in height. It has longitudinally fluted branches and stems with smooth bark and glabrous and resinous new shoots. The glabrous branchlets become flattened toward the terminus of the branches and are flattened and obscurely ribbed. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes instead of true leaves.
The species was first formally described by the botanists Joseph Maiden and William Blakely in 1927. The specific epithet is taken from the Latin words gracilis meaning graceful or slender and folium meaning leaf in reference to the long thin phyllodes. The shrub is part of the Acacia wilhelmiana group along with nine close relatives: Acacia abrupta, Acacia ascendens, Acacia barattensis, Acacia brachypoda, Acacia cowaniana, Acacia helmsiana, Acacia leptalea, Acacia menzelii and Acacia viscifolia.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a height of but can be as tall as . It has rough, slightly fissured bark that is grey or grey-brown in colour with angular branches that are light brown to reddish in colour and mostly glabrous. The evergreen phyllodes sometimes have reddish margins. The blade shape is flat and linear to narrowly elliptic with a length of and a width of long with one prominent central nerve.
The erect, spreading and spindly shrub or small tree typically grows to a height of with a diffuse and often weeping habit but sometimes it can be bushy and low-spreading. It has dark grey to grey-brown coloured bark that can be smooth or flaky. The brown, slightly angular branchlets are glabrous and have inconspicuous ridges abd obvious lenticels. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The yellow-green glabrous phyllodes have a length of with a width of around and have four main nerves. It flowers from May to September producing yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences are found singly or in groups of two or three in the axils. The subsessile flower-heads have an obloid to shortly cylindrical shape with a length of and a diameter of and are sub-densely pack with golden coloured flowers.
The phyllodes have a length of and a width of and often have a small callose tip at the apex, they usually have five to eight prominent and raised longitudinal nerves. It blooms from April to August and produces yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences are in the form of erect cylindrical flower-spikes with a length of packed with golden coloured flowers. Following flowering flat woody seed pods that are encrusted with resin form.
In exposed situations it is a large, prostrate or decumbent shrub, with its trunk and lower branches usually growing along the ground, reaching up to 3 m in height and spreading to 4 m or more horizontally. The oval phyllodes are 50–100 mm long with prominent longitudal veins. The bright yellow flowers occur as elongated spikes up to 50 mm long in the phyllode axils. Flowering occurs mainly in late winter and spring.
The bush is also full of long spines. It usually flowers between August and November producing an axillary flower-spike with small, bright yellow spherical flower heads and the fruits are brown pods long. The hard black seeds within have an oblong shape and are about in length and half as wide. The spiny stipules that grow at the base of the phyllodes deter livestock from feeding on or too close to the plant.
The shrub typically grows to a height of or is found sometimes as a tree up heights of around usually with a spreading habit. It has sericeous new shoots with pale yellow-brown hairs that age to have a silvery colour. The acutely angled branchlets are silvery-sericeous. The silvery-green to grey-green phyllodes usually have an obliquely narrowly elliptic shape that is more or less straight but often shallowly recurved at the apice.
The phyllodes have silvery-grey hairs and a length of and a width of and an obscure midvein. It blooms between July and October producing simple inflorescences that occur singly in the axils. The spherical flower-heads have a diameter of containing 22 to 38 bright yellow coloured flowers. Following flowering it produces straight and flat seed pods that have straight sides and a length of and a width of and a thin leathery texture.
Acacia leioderma also commonly known as the Porongurup wattle is a species of wattle which is endemic to an area in the lower Great Southern region of Western Australia centered on Albany. An erect shrub that typically grows to a height of between , it has red to brown glabrous branchlets that are prominently ribbed with stipules long. It has small, fern-like green phyllodes (leaves) and light golden flowers. Flowers appear between April and November.
The glabrous and coriaceous phyllodes have a single main nerve and are finely penninerved. It blooms from June to November and produces yellow flowers. It has simple inflorescences that are found singly in the axils with spherical flower-heads that have a diameter of around containing 60 to 70 densely packed golden coloured flowers. The chartaceous, light brown or yellow-brown coloured seed pods that form after flowering are curved and rounded over the seeds.
The simple inflorescences are arranged with one per axil with spherical flower-heads containing 15 to 20 light golden flowers that turn orange-brown when dry. After flowering linear yellow woodyseed pods form that are around in length and around wide. The mottled seeds within the pods have an ovate to oblong shape and are about in length. The phyllodes resemble those of Acacia tetragonophylla and the acicular phyllode variant of Acacia maitlandii.
A. latzii is a shrub or tree which grows to a height of 3 to7 m. The branchlets may be smooth or have a sparse covering of minute flat lying hairs. The phyllodes (5–10 cm long by 2–4 mm wide) are narrowly linear and generally with a shallow incurving. They are leathery and a khaki to greyish green and like the branchlets may be smooth or have a sparse covering of fine hairs.
The glabrous phyllodes are longitudinally wrinkled and a green to yellow-green colour with distinct yellow coloured marginal nerves. It blooms profusely from June to October and produces yellow flowers. It produces inflorescences the occur mostlysingly and have spherical flower-heads with a diameter of that are sub-densley packed with 9 to 15 golden coloured flowers. Following flowering crustaceous to coriaceous brown coloured seed pods for that have a narrowly oblong shape.
The phyllodes are usually thick and rigid and have often have three veins on each face with one more prominent than the others. It produces yellow flowers between September and October and fruits in February. The simple inflorescences are found singly or in pairs on spikes containing clusters of two to six flowers that are less than in length. The seed pods that form after flowering are subcylindrical or resemble a string of bead.
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. An understorey plant in eucalyptus forest, it is found from southern New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory, through Victoria and into southeastern South Australia. Explorer Thomas Mitchell collected the type specimen, from which George Bentham wrote the species description in 1842. No subspecies are recognised.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a maximum height of and has many branches that grow more or less parallel to the main stem. It has dark grey coloured bark that is corrugated and longitudinally fissured. The glabrous and angular branchlets are a pinkish to dull purplish red colour and can be covered in granules and often are resinous. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
This species grows as a spreading shrub or low tree, up to four metres long and often wider than it is high. Like most Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. These are greyish green in colour, round in cross- section, and held almost vertically; they may be up to thirteen centimetres long and two millimetres in diameter. The flowers are yellow, and held in cylindrical clusters about two centimetres long.
The species was first formally described by the botanist George Bentham in 1864 in the work Flora Australiensis. It was reclassified as Racosperma continuum by Leslie Pedley in 2003 then transferred back to the genus Acacia in 2006. The species is often confused and misidentified as Acacia colletioides. The specific epithet is taken from the Latin word continua meaning uninterrupted, in reference to the phyllodes running continuously from the stems and branchlets.
The phyllodes are sub-rigid and straight to shallowly incurved with ten longitudinal nerves of uniform width which are each separated by a narrow dark longitudinal furrow. It blooms in August producing yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences are made of flower-spikes that are in length densely packed with golden flowers. The thinly coriaceous–crustaceous to firmly chartaceous seed pods that form after flowering have a length of and a width of .
The phyllodes have a length of and a width of and are glabrous with eight broad nerves. It blooms from May to September producing yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences occur singly or in pairs in the axils and have spherical to obloid flower-heads with a length of and a diameter of with golden flowers. The linear seed pods that form after flowering have a maximum length of around and are in width.
The terete, brittle branchlets have obscure ribbing. The green to grey-green phyllodes are mostly linear in shape and have a length of and a width of and have very fine parallel longitudinal nerves that are close together. It is known to flower between April and May and as late as October and is thought to bloom in response rainfall events. The simple inflorescences occur in groups of two to six on the axils.
Acacia acrionastes is a shrub belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Phyllodineae that is native to parts of eastern Australia. The shrub or tree has a spindly habit and typically grows to a height of and has smooth bark. It has linear phyllodes that are straight to slightly curved with a length of and a width of . It blooms between July and August and produces inflorescences with creamy yellow flowers.
The shrub has a spreading habit and typically grows to a height of and a width of . The large grey-green phyllodes have an ovate- lanceolate shape with a length of and a width of and are covered with white silky hairs, with three to four prominent veins. The flowers are rod-like and bright yellow, 3–5 cm long. The thinly crustaceous seed pods that form after flowering are tightly irregularly coiled and have a width of .
Acacia kingiana was a species of wattle that occurred in an area north east of Wagin in the Avon Wheatbelt region of south-west Western Australia. It has been declared extinct under Australia's Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999, and Western Australia's Wildlife Conservation Act 1950.. Retrieved 16 November 2018. The species was described by Joseph Maiden and William Blakely in 1928. They described the species as a bushy shrub tall, with -long, -wide phyllodes, and yellow flowers.
The small to medium sized shrub can reach a height of around . It has rigid and narrow phyllodes that are in length and terminate with a sharp point. It blooms between late summer and spring producing inflorescences with cream or pale yellow coloured flowers that are found in spherical shaped clusters appearing in the phyllode axils. The simple inflorescences mostly occur in groups of two to four and the flower-heads contain 12 to 25 flowers.
The shrub usually has a bushy habit and grows to a height of less that but can reach as high as . It is often composed of five to six main branches diverging at the base of the plant. The branches are erect or arched and split into ribbed, brown to green, smooth, hairy branchlets. The dark grey-green to green coloured phyllodes are flat or convex with an elliptic to broadly elliptic or slightly orbicular shape.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has a spreading crown resembling an umbrella. It often divides into several obliquely ascending stems around the base and forming a quite dense canopy The angular, smooth branchlets are a reddish to brown colour with greyish bark that is fissured near the base of the stems. The obliquely-lanceolate shaped green phyllodes have a length of and a width of . It flowers irregularly between June and September producing yellow flowers.
They are in length and wide with fine, sparse, straight hairs lying flat against the surface. The phyllodes have a slightly excentric midrib and obscure lateral nerves. It blooms between August and September producing simple or racemose inflorescences that have obloid to subglobular flower-heads that are around in length and contain 14 to 26 golden or rich lemon yellow coloured flowers. After flowering it forms thinly coriaceous seed pods that are velvety with ferruginous to silvery-ferruginous hairs.
Spreading gidgee grows as an upright tree to a height of up to and has ribbed branchlets that are densely hired between each of the ribs. Like most Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. These are flat, curved, and have a length of about and a width of and have longitudinal striations. When it between July and October it produces simple inflorescences that occur in groups of one to five in the axils on long stalks.
The dark green phyllodes have a narrowly oblong to oblanceolate shape and can be straight or slightly curved. They have a length of around and a width of with an obscure midrib and lateral nerves. It blooms between July and October usually mostly in September and produces rudimentary inflorescences with spherical flower-heads that contain 10 to 18 golden flowers. After flowering firmly chartaceous seed pods form with a linear shape that are straight to shallowly curved.
The flat, evergreen phyllodes have a narrowly oblong-oblanceolate shape and are shallowly incurved to straight and usually have a length of and a width of . It blooms from between December and January and from May to October and produces obloid to short-cylindrical flower-spikes with a length of . Following flowering firmly crustaceous, red-brown coloured seed pods will form. The pods are straight, flat and linear with a length of and a width of .
The evergreen, leathery phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to linear shape and are generally straight with a length of and a width of . They have one prominent midvein and numerous fine longitudinal veins that are barely visible. It blooms between August and October producing inflorescences that occur singly or in pairs in the axils on stalks that are in length. The ovoid or cylindrical shaped flower-heads are in length and densely packed with bright yellow coloured flowers.
The straight to slightly curved, leathery phyllodes are very narrowly elliptic, and 1.5-4.5 cm by 1.4-5.2 mm, and have prominent stomata, with 1 or more prominent veins and indistinct parallel minor veins. Its globular yellow heads are 3-4.5 mm in diameter, with 10-13 flowers per head. The flowers are 5-merous and have a smooth, almost free calyx which is 0.9-1.1 mm long. The smooth corolla is 1.4-1.6 mm long.
There were several closely related trees which used to all come under the name of Acacia cunninghamii, but have been now identified as a number of separate species. The Acacia cunninghamii 'group' all have spiky inflorescences and large phyllodes. They are closely interrelated and taxonomically 'difficult' species, and are often confused and poorly defined.Acacia leiocalyx: Look for diagnosis A. leiocalyx is most closely related to Acacia concurrens, but the differences between the two species are subtle.
It has been mistaken in the past as A. melanoxylon, A. myrtifoliia, and A. mucronata and has been suggested to be a hybrid due to its rarity and limited sexual reproduction, however has multiple morphological differences. Most closely related to A. kettlewelliae, which is distinguished especially by its more elongate phyllodes with the gland 5–15 mm above the pulvinus and pods 5–10 cm long and is a species that occurs only on the mainland of Australia.
On the lower branches the thickly coriaceous phyllodes are caducous with an oblanceolate shape and have a length of and are wide. It blooms from October to December and produces yellow flowers. The rudimentary inflorescences occur singly on a raceme with a long axis with spherical flower-heads that have a diamter of and contain 36 to 53 golden coloured flowers. The seed pods that form after flowering are not constricted between each of the seeds.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and has a spreading habit and glabrous branchlets with phyllodes that have an inequilaterally oblanceolate to narrowly elliptic shape. The racemose inflorescences occur prolifically in the upper axils. The spherical flower-heads have a diameter of containing three to five loosely packed bright golden flowers. The firmly chartaceous to thinly coriaceous seed pods have a narrowly oblong shape with a length of up to and a width of .
The tree or tall shrub typically grows to a height of and has sparsely arranged whippy branches. It has smooth red-brown to grey- brown coloured bark that becomes fibrous with age. The evergreen narrowly elliptic or elliptic shaped phyllodes are straight with a length of and a width of and have between two and four prominent nerves. It blooms between June and August producing flower-spikes with a length of that are densely packed with bright yellow flowers.
The species was first formally described by the botanist George Bentham as a part of the William Jackson Hooker work Notes on Mimoseae, with a synopsis of species as published in the London Journal of Botany. It was reclassified as Racosperma sessile in 2003 then transferred back to genus Acacia in 2006. The specific epithet is derived from Latin meaning fit for sitting on in reference to the phyllodes or flowers growing directly from the stem without a stalk.
Acacia amanda is an erect, often multi-stemmed shrub which grows from 0.4–2 m high. Its branchlets are smooth, and have a waxy bloom. The dull grey green phyllodes are narrowly elliptic, straight to strongly recurved, and 38–124 mm long by 8–36 mm wide, and have three main nerves. The inflorescences are simple or racemose with the raceme axes 75–180 mm long on peduncles 15–35 mm long with 1–3 per axil.
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.
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 and crescent honeyeaters, and Eastern spinebills have been observed foraging. Other bird species include the silvereye, striated, buff-rumped and brown thornbills.
Acacia euthycarpa is a shrub or small tree species that is endemic to southern Australia. It shares its common names of wallowa or reed-leaf wattle with a similar species Acacia calamifolia. It usually grows as a shrub to between 2 and 4 metres high, but certain forms may be small trees up to 10 metres high. The linear phyllodes are up to 10 cm long, dull green or grey green and have sharply pointed hooked tips.
The smooth phyllodes are curved, and are 80-260 mm long by 4-18 mm wide. They have two primary veins (sometimes 1 or 3) and the secondary may be oblique, veined like a feather or forming a network. The base of the phyllode narrows gradually but the apex is acute. There are three glands along the dorsal margin and at the pulvinus. The axilliary inflorescences are racemes or panicles, with 4-11 heads per raceme.
The phyllodes are elliptic, smooth, and curved, and are 70-180 mm long by 7-35 mm wide, with two to three primary veins. The secondary veins are oblique or penniveined or form a network. The base of the phyllode is attenuate, while the apex is obtuse. There are four to five glands along the dorsal margin. The axillary inflorescences are racemes or panicles, with 9-24 heads per raceme, on an axis 65-150 mm long.
A species of Acacia, growing as a woody shrub that is straggly in habit. Associated with banded iron formation, the species is found on rocky inclines growing in silty red-brown clay containing pebbles of ironstone or shale. The phyllodes of Acacia karina exhibit hairs closely pressed to the nerve of its structure. Identified from material obtained near Morawa, the known distribution range is the Yalgoo and Perenjori districts of the Eremaean Province in Western Australia.
The species was first formally described by the botanist George Bentham in 1842 as part of William Jackson Hooker's work Notes on Mimoseae, with a synopsis of species as published in the London Journal of Botany. It was reclassified as Racosperma filifolium by Leslie Pedley in 2003 then transferred back to genus Acacia in 2006. The specific epithet (filifolia) is derived from the Latin words filum meaning "thread" and folium meaning "a leaf", possibly referring to the slender phyllodes.
The shrub has an erect to decumbent habit and typically grows to a height of and has ribbed stems that are covered in stiff short hairs. The phyllodes are fine and prickly with a length of and a width of and have four veins that are usually bent downwards. It blooms between August and November and produces inflorescences with pale yellow flowers. Each inflorescence occurs a one to three spherical flowers on individual stalks found in the leaf axils.
The species was first formally described by the botanist James Edward Smith in 1795 as Mimosa hispidula in the work A Specimen of the Botany of New Holland . It was then described as Acacia hispidula by Carl Ludwig Willdenow in 1806 as part of the work Species Plantarum. It was reclassified as Racosperma hispidulum by Leslie Pedley in 2003 then transferred back to genus Acacia in 2006. The shrub is mistaken for Acacia aspera which has longer and narrower phyllodes.
Acacia lineata grows into a bushy, low spreading shrub 0.5-2m high and 1-2.5m wide. Branchlets are round, hairy and resinous. It is a perennial. Like a lot of Acacias, the leaves of A. lineata are not true leaves, but a modified leaf stem known as a phyllode. The phyllodes of A. lineata are dark green, sparsely to densely hairy, often sticky, slightly clustered, tough and erect; ending in a small point 0.7-2.5cm long to 1-3mm wide.
The slender and erect shrub typically grows to a height of although it can reach up to and can possess multiple stems. It has few to many slender and spreading to erect stems growing from ground level producing an open or dense crown. Smooth grey bark at the base with pale brown to dull reddish on the upper branches. The dull grey-green terete phyllodes are quite slender with a length of and a width of and have numerous fine parallel longitudinal nerves.
The green phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic shape and are often straight with a length of and a width of with numerous fine longitudinal nerves that are close together. The simple inflorescences occur singly or in pairs in the axils. The flower-heads have an obloid heads with a length of and a diameter of . The straight, thinly crustaceous to coriaceous seed pods that form after flowering are a red to brown colour with a length of and a width of .
The shrub or small tree usually has a single stem and can grow to a height of and has a spindly habit with an open crown. It has smooth grey or reddish-brown bark found on the on lower trunk. The grey to medium green coloured phyllodes have a narrowly elliptic to narrowly oblanceolate shape with a length of up to around and a width of . It blooms intermittently between July and January producing inflorescences containing 5 to 14 spherical coloured flower-heads.
The spreading shrub or tree has minni ritchi style bark typically grows to a height of but can reach as high as . The crown is often spreading but sometimes flat-topped. The bark is a burgundy red to reddish-brown colour which peels off the trunk and branches in thin strips that curl backward. The narrowly linear shaped phyllodes have a length of and a width of in the typical variant which become longer and wider for the dwarf variant.
The sparingly branched tree can grow to a height of and has reddish coloured sticky branchlets. It has dull blue-green oblong shaped phyllodes that are straight and leathery, blunt and smooth with a length of and a width of with a prominent mid vein. When it blooms between June and July it produces golden spherical flower-heads followed by brown seed pods. The bead like seed pods are straight and smooth with a length of and a width of around .
DMT in bark (up to 1.6%) and in leaves (0.6–1.0%) with some ß-carbolines, young leaves mainly containing tryptamine;recent Net reports, Australian underground info 0.72% alkaloids from leaves and stems, mostly tryptamine. Broad-leafed form gave 0.72% total alkaloid and narrow-leafed form gave 1.5% total alkaloid. Both collected Oct. White 1957 Broad-leaf A.acuminata phyllodes resulted in 51% MTHBC, 32% DMT, 16% tryptamine, 0.5% Harman, 0.4% 3-methyl-Quinoline (not verified), 0.3% N-Methyl-PEA, and 0.1% PEA.
The shrub has an erect or spreading habit and typically to a height of . It has glabrous or finely haired branchlets that are more or less terete with stipules that are . The green, rigid and clustered phyllodes sometimes clustered are straight and linear with a length of and a width of . It blooms mostly between August and October producing inflorescences that occur singly in axils and have spherical flower-heads with a diameter of containing 15 to 30 bright yellow flowers.
The glabrous and somewhat resinous shrub typically grows to a height of and has a bushy, rounded habit. It branchlets have small rounded protuberances and crowded, light green, linear to narrowly oblong shaped flat phyllodes that are straight or incurved. They have a length of and a width of and are abruptly constricted at the base with an obscure midrib. The simple inflorescences occur singly in the axils and have spherical flower-heads that contain 25 to 35 deep lemon yellow coloured flowers.
The glabrous, diffuse and somewhat resinous shrub typically grows to a height of . It has prominently ribbed branchlets with no stipules and sessile, patent, green phyllodes with a narrowly triangular to linear- triangular shape that are in length and wide with a prominent midrib. It blooms between August and January with sporadic flowering at other times producing yellow flowers. It is very similar in appearance to Acacia ulicifolia (Prickly Moses) but is easily distinguished by the sticky appearance of A. rupicola.
The thin grey-green phyllodes look crowded on their stem projections and usually have an inequilaterally narrowly elliptic to oblong-oblanceolate shape. They are in length and wide and are glabrous except few marginal hairs near base. The racemose inflorescences are aggregated in the upper axils and have sperical flower-heads containing 15 to 20 golden flowers. The glabrous and firmly chartaceous seed pods that form after flowering are linear to shallowly curved with a length of up to and a width of .
The phyllodes have a length of and a wisth of and are sub-rigid and thickly coriaceous with four to six prominent main nerves on each side. The simple inflorescences occur singly or in small groups in the axils. The cylindrical flower-spikes have a diameter of around and a length of and are densely packed with golden flowers. The pendent seed pods that form after flowering have a linear shape with narrow wings and are straight to slightly curved.
The rigid, glabrous and grey-green coloured phyllodes have a length of and a width of have eight prominent nerves with deep furrows between each nerve. It blooms from June to August producing yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences occur in pairs in the axils with sessile and spherical to broadly ellipsoid shaped flowerheads with a length of and a diameter of containing 20 to 25 golden coloured flowers. After flowering coriaceous seed pods with a narrowly oblong shape form that are strongly undulate.
The species was first formally described by the botanist George Bentham in 1855 as part of the work Plantae Muellerianae: Mimoseae a spublished in Linnaea: ein Journal für die Botanik in ihrem ganzen Umfange, oder Beiträge zur Pflanzenkunde. It was reclassified as Racosperma nematophyllum by Leslie Pedley in 2003 then transferred back genus Acacia in 2006. The specific epithet is taken from the Greek word nemato meaning thread-like and phyllon meaning leaf in reference to the shape of the phyllodes.
Fibroadenomas are benign (not harmful in effect) tumours of the breast, most often present in women in their 20s and 30s. Clinically, fibroadenomas are usually solid breast lumps that are: • Painless • Firm or rubbery • Mobile • Solitary-round with distinct, smooth borders People who have a simple fibroadenoma have a slightly increased risk of developing malignant (harmful) breast cancer. Complex fibroadenomas may increase the risk of breast cancer. In the male breast, fibroepithelial tumors are very rare, and are mostly phyllodes tumors.
Acacia uncifolia, commonly known as coast wirilda, is a wattle endemic to south-eastern Australia. It grows as a tall shrub or small tree, up to 2–6 m high and 2–4 m wide, in coastal areas of South Australia and Victoria, as well as on Tasmania’s Flinders Island and possibly other islands in Bass Strait. Its preferred habitats are coastal heathland, shrubland and dry open woodland on calcarenite soils. The phyllodes have hooked tips and the flowers are pale yellow.
The phyllodes have a length of and a width of with one to three indistinct main longitudinal nerves. It blooms in July and produces yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences occur singly or in pairs in the axils and have spherical flower-heads with a diameter of containing 30 to 45 light golden coloured flowers. Following flowering thin leathery seed pods form that have a linear to narrowly oblong shape but are curved and undulate with a length of and a width of .
The tree or shrub typically grows to a height of but can be as high as . It is generally V-shaped with an open and usually spindly form. It usually divides above ground level to form some main stems that are straight, diagonally spreading to erect and covered in smooth light grey bark except toward the base where it can become longitudinally fissured. The phyllodes are usually obliquely elliptic to narrowly elliptic in shape that becomes narrowed at both ends.
The phyllodes have a length of and a width of and possess two to four main longitudinal nerves that are mostly confluent with the lower margin at the base. It is known to bloom between April and June producing simple inflorescences situated on long stalks. The cylindrical flower-spikes have a length of and are densely packed with yellow coloured flowers. The seed pods that form after flowering have a narrowly oblong to narrowly oblanceolate shape that is narrowed towards the base.
The tree or shrub is slender, has rough bark and typically grows to a height of . It blooms from July to September producing yellow flowers. The slightly fissured to shredded looking bark is present on the trunk and larger limbs with the angular upper branchlets that are glabrous and have resinous ridges and brown triangular stipules that are in height. The evergreen phyllodes have a linear to narrowly elliptic and linear-oblanceolate shape and can be slightly curved or straight.
The shrub or tree typically grows to a height of and has few to many stems that have shallow or deep longitudinal flutings along their length. The grey to brown coloured bark is mostly smooth but can occasionally be fissured toward the base. The new shoots tend to be encrusted in resin and have a few red glandular hairlets while the resin ribbed branclets are hairy between the ribs. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The dense, spreading shrub with a rounded habit typically grows to a height of and often wider. The grey-green flat phyllodes have an obliquely oblanceolate to obovate shape with a length of and a width of . It blooms between July and November producing axillary inflorescences composed of two to five spherical bright yellow flower-heads. After flowering long, dark brown seed pods form that are straight to slightly curved with a length of around and a width of about .
The shrub has a bushy habit and typically grows to a height of and has angled reddish brown branchlets. The thin grey green phyllodes are ascending to erect with an oblanceolate shape and a length of and a width of with a fine but distinct midrib and obscure lateral nerves. The plant blooms between October and January producing yellow inflorescences. The inflorescences appear in clusters of six to eight with spherical dense flower heads containing 18 to 23 bright yellow flowers.
Fitzgerald and Siournis reported in the Australian Journal of Chemistry (1965, volume 18, pp. 433–4) that a sample of the bark contained 0.36% of the hallucinogen dimethyltryptamine as well as 0.24% of N-methyltryptamine. However, anecdotal evidence suggests that the concentration of dimethyltryptamine and other tryptamines in A. maidenii is very variable and may be zero in some varieties. Older trees tend to have a higher percentage of dimethyltryptamine and more alkaloids are present after rain during summer, in the phyllodes, bark and root bark.
Daviesia corymbosa grows as an open shrub and reaches high. Like other members of the pea family it has phyllodes rather than leaves. These are variable in shape, ranging from obovate (egg-shaped) or oval to linear and measure long and wide, and are green in colour with a prominent network of veins. The yellow to red flowers appear from August to December, but peak in Spring over September and October, and are arranged in groups of 5 to 20 in umbelliform or corymbose racemes.
Margins are thick, there is a visible vein running lengthwise and a small gland near the base. The inflorescence is a bright yellow ball 4-6mm in diameter, containing 10-16 flowers on a slim stalk 2.5-10mm long (singly or in pairs), growing out from the base of the phyllodes. The seed pod or legumes are curved and can be flat or twisted, 2-6cm long and 2-4mm wide, turning from green to a dark brown when mature and papery in texture.
The phyllodes usually have a length of and a width of and have many evenly spaced nerves with three or five often being a little more pronounced than the others. It blooms from May to July producing yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences are found in pairs in the axils with narrow and cylindrical flower-spikes that are in length and packed with golden coloured flowers. The woody red seed pods that form after flowering have a narrowly oblong shape that narrows toward the base.
The phyllodes are quite thin, obtuse and subglaucous and usually have two nerves per face with many barely noticeable minor nerves. It blooms from March to August producing yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences occur singly or in pairs in the axils on stalks that are in length supporting cylindrical flower-spikes with a length of and a width of packed with golden coloured flowers. Following flowering woody, red-brown seed pods form that have a narrowly oblong to linear shape and are narrowed at the base.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Barbara Rae Randell in 1992 as part of the work Mulga. A revision of the major species as published in the Journal of the Adelaide Botanic Gardens It was reclassified as Racosperma paraneurum by Leslie Pedley in 2003 and then transferred back to genus Acacia in 2006. The specific epithet is taken from the Greek words para meaning near and aneura meaning without nerves in reference to the phyllodes and the affinity of the species to Acacia aneura.
The species was first formally described by the botanists Mary Tindale and C.Herscovich in 1992 as part of the work Acacia meiantha (Fabaceae, Mimosoideae), a new species from the Central Tablelands of New South Wales as published in the journal Australian Systematic Botany. It was reclassified as Racosperma meianthum by Leslie Pedley in 2003 then transferred back to genus Acacia in 2006. The specific epithet is derived from the few flowers contained in the flower-heads. The phyllodes resemble those of Acacia linifolia and Acacia boormanii.
Galls formed by alt=Round green ball-like galls among green phyllodes (leaves) Golden wattle occurs in south-eastern Australia from South Australia's southern Eyre Peninsula and Flinders Ranges 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.
The phyllodes have long seta that are softy puberulous and have one prominent main vein with multiple parallel minor veins. It blooms between May and June or in October to November producing yellow flowers. The cylindrical flower-spikes have a length of and are densely packed with golden flowers. The narrowly oblong seed pods that form after flowering have fairly straight sides and are straight to slightly curved with a length of and covered with matted golden wooly hairs that age to a white colour.
The bright green chartaceous phyllodes are flat and straight to very shallowly recurved with a length of and a width of and have one prominent midnerve, often along with another two subprominent nerves. It blooms between April and August producing yellow flowers. The single cylindrical flower-spikes have a length of and a width of with golden flowers. Following flowering glabrous brown seed pods that resemble a string of beads form that are curved to openly coiled with a length of and a width of that have longitudinal nerves.
It prefers full sun to partial shade and it is often found on the edge of the rainforest. It grows up to 20 m height in an erect or spreading habit. The phyllodes are dark green, alternate along the stem and reach 20 cm in length and 1 to 3 cm in width. It is very fast growing, reaching 1.5 m tall in as little as five months. Its flowers have pale yellow spikes up to 6 cm long that often occur in clusters of two to three.
Inhabitants did not use the fruits for food, but for hair-washing, and it had little economic importance. According to Wester's botanical description, biasong fruit aroma is similar to that of the samuyao. The tree reaches 7.5 to 9 meters in height. Leaves are 9–12 cm long, 2.7–4.0 cm wide, broadly elliptical to ovate, crenate, thin, with base rounded or broadly acute; apex acutely blunt pointed. Petioles are 3.5–6 cm long, broadly winged, up to 4 cm wide, with wings (phyllodes) sometimes larger than the leaf.
The rigid phyllodes have a length of and a width of and have four broad and prominent flat-topped, broad nerves with a central nerve prominently raised over the others. It blooms from May to July producing yellow flowers. The simple inflorescences usually occur as pairs in the axils with spherical to shortly obloid shaped flower-heads that have a diameter of about and contain 13 to 20 light golden coloured flowers. The glabrous, coriaceous-crustaceous seed pods that form after flowering have a linear shape but are slightly constricted between each of the seeds.
The species was first formally described by Georg August Pritzel in 1904 as part of the work by Ptritzel and Ludwig Diels Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae occidentalis. Beitrage zur Kenntnis der Pflanzen Westaustraliens, ihrer Verbreitung und ihrer Lebensverhaltnisse as published in Botanische Jahrbücher für Systematik, Pflanzengeschichte und Pflanzengeographie. It was reclassified as Racosperma xiphophyllum in 2003 by Leslie Pedley then transferred back to genus Acacia in 2006. The specific epithet is taken from the Greek words xiphos meaning sword and phyllon meaning leaf in reference to the shape of the phyllodes.
The blue-grey to grey-green pungent and coriaceous phyllodes usually have an elliptic to obovate or orbicular shape with a length of and a width of and have a prominent and central midrib. It produces rounded yellow flowerheads between April and August in the species' native range. The simple inflorescences occur along a long raceme with showy, spherical flower-heads that are densely packed with 70 to 80 bright golden coloured flowers. Following flowering shallowly curved to openly once-coiled seed pods form that have a narrowly oblong shape and are rounded over seeds.
Sketch of Acacia cyclops phyllodes and flowers Sketches of various Acacia including A. cyclops seed pod at bottom right Acacia cyclops, commonly known as coastal wattle, cyclops wattle, one-eyed wattle, red-eyed wattle, redwreath acacia, western coastal wattle, rooikrans, rooikans acacia, is a coastal shrub or small tree in the family Fabaceae. Native to Australia, it is distributed along the west coast of Western Australia as far north as Jurien Bay, and along the south coast into South Australia. The Noongar peoples of Western Australia know the plant as wilyawa or woolya wah.
Acacia acuminata grows as a tall shrub or small tree growing 3-7m, In ideal conditions it may grow to a height of ten metres, but in most of its distribution it does not grow above five metres. As with most Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. These are bright green, around ten centimetres long and about two millimetres wide, and finish in a long point. The lemon yellow flowers are held in tight cylindrical clusters about two centimetres long, flowering occur late winter to spring.
The linear, green and rigidly erect phyllodes are in length and in diameter. It flowers from July to September producing yellow flowers. The cylindrical flower-spikes occur singly or in pairs in the axils 1 or 2 in axils and are in length and and are densely packed with golden coloured flowers. The straight to slightly curved light brown seed pods that form after flowering have a linear shape and are straight-sided or slightly constricted between each of the seeds with a length of and are wide.
They are green to grey-green or blue-green and slightly asymmetric and flat or sometimes convex or broadly elliptic in shape. The phyllodes are in length and wide and sparsely hairy or glabrous. It blooms between October and November and produces simple inflorescences with spherical flower-heads that have a diameter of and contain 20 to 30 pale yellow flowers. The sub-glossy to blackish seed pods that form after flowering have a narrowly oblong to oblong shape and are quite straight with a length of and a width of .
The subglaucous and hairy phyllodes have a length of and a width of and become longitudinally wrinkled as they dry. It blooms between August and September producing yellow flowers. The inflorescences appear in groups of one to three on an axillary axis, the spherical flower- heads have a diameter of and contain 30 to 40 yellow or bright yellow flowers. After flowering hairy and leathery seed pods form that are flat but also strongly curved or twisted and have straight sides but can be slightly constricted between the seeds.
Plant Pathol 36:100–106 It is uncertain if previous reports of Uromycladium fungal infections reported on F. moluccana are from U. tepperianum or U. falcatarium. For example, laboratory studies that manually inoculated F. moluccana and Acacia mangium with Uromycladium fungal spores collected from F. moluccana in Yogyakarta, Indonesia were only infectious on the sengon leaves and spores did not penetrate the A. mangium leaves.Widyastuti, S.M., Harjono, and Z.A. Surya. 2013. Initial infection of Falcataria moluccana leaves and Acacia mangium phyllodes by Uromycladium tepperianum fungi in a laboratory trial.
The glabrous phyllodes have a length of and a width of with a prominent mid-vein. It can bloom between July and October but most commonly between August and September and produces inflorescences that appear in groups of 5 to 18 in axillary racemes. The spherical flower-heads have a diameter of and contain 13 to 25 pale yellow to cream coloured flowers that are occasionally bright yellow. The flat, leathery, brown seed pods that form after flowering are more or less straight but can be slightly curved.
The phyllodes are in length and have a width of and have a slightly raised midrib and also have a fine white powdery coating. It blooms from April to June and produces yellow-cream flowers. The axillary or terminal inflorescences are found along an raceme axes with a length of with spherical to obloid shaped flower-heads that have a diameter of and contain 45 to 65 light golden coloured flowers. Following flowering thinly coriaceous seed pods form that have a linear shape but are contricted between and rounded over each of the seeds.
The shrub typically grows to a height of and have a diffuse, spreading, openly branched and multi-stemmed habit. The main stems are usually slightly crooked and support an open croen with smooth grey coloured bark on the main stems that becomes a light bronze colour on the on upper branches. The terete and glabrous branchlets have yelloish to bronze coloured but obscure ribbing and spint stipules with a length of that are found less as the plants ages. Like mosr pecies of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves.
The green phyllodes usually have a length of and a width of with an obscure slightly raised midrib and no lateral nerves. It blooms from August to September and produces yellow flowers. The rudimentary inflorescences occur singly on racemes with an axis length of less than and have sperical flower-heads with a diameter of containing 7 to 23 bright lemon yellow coloured flowers. The thinly coriaceous seed pods that form after flowering rounded over the seeds with a length of up to and a width of and covered in a fine white powdery coating.
The tumorous growth can also change the consistency of the gland and cause facial pain on the involved side. Around 20% of parotid tumors are malignant, with the most common tumors being mucoepidermoid carcinoma and adenoid cystic carcinoma. Other malignant tumors of the parotid gland include acinic cell carcinoma, carcinoma expleomorphic adenoma, adenocarcinoma (arising from ductal epithelium of parotid gland), squamous cell carcinoma (arising from parenchyma of parotid gland), and undifferentiated carcinoma. Metastasis from other sites like phyllodes tumour of breast presenting as parotid swelling have also been described.
The evergreen phyllodes have an elliptic to broadly elliptic shape and are straight to slightly curved with a length of and a width of and have three to four prominent veins. It usually flowers in the spring and produces inflorescences that appear singly on the raceme axis. The spherical flower- heads have a diameter of and contain 15 to 30 pale yellow to cream-coloured flowers. The firmly papery to thinly leathery seed pods that form after flowering are straight or curved and flat but can be constricted between the seeds.
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.
Terrestrial forms in particular can be very difficult to identify. It is most likely to be confused with P. natans which it resembles in general habit, but can usually be distinguished by the presence of submerged leaves (these are reduced to strap-like phyllodes in P.natans) and the absence of a discoloured mark at the base of the floating leaves. The submerged leaves of P. alpinus can be similar, but these are sessile. Although a common plant, bog pondweed does not seem to hybridise readily with other pondweeds, though hybrids with P. natans (P.
The long lived perennial small to medium-sized tree with an upright habit and an open crown that typically grows to a height of and a width of . The tree can be have a single or multiple stems with rough greyish bark rough. The branchlets commonly lightly covered in waxy bloom but are not prominently ribbed. It has light green slender sickle shaped phyllodes that have a length of up to and a width of and have three to seven prominent nerves and many other fainter ones that are parallel and branching.
The beautiful golden-flowering Eprapah wattle (Acacia fimbriata var perangusta) was previously considered to be a species in its own right, but is now considered to be an extreme form of another species, the Brisbane golden wattle or fringed wattle. It can be distinguished by the dimensions of the phyllodes, gland position, and the flower colour. Certain patches of the site have had specific plantings where weeds have been removed. Representative of the local area, the site has battled overgrowths of non-native plant pests such as Lantana camara and groundsel (Baccharis halimifolia), as well as mosquitoes and ticks.
Acacia cana is one of Australia's native wattles. It grows to about 6m in height and is a dense shrub-tree that is often described as gnarled and deformed in shape. It is a native species that is a perennial that produces 15-35 flowers that are coloured bright yellow to golden, these flowers start to occur in August right through to October. The shrub is found to have 5–13 cm long branchlets (phyllodes) that are covered in fine silver hairs; leaves are thin with a length of 6 cm and a width of 5mm.
The plant flowers between May and July but sometimes as late as September with Inflorescences that have rudimentary racemes which are scattered over the plants and not particularly showy. The spikes are bright golden with small flowers, that eventually form flat seed pods which have a linear to narrowly oblong shape and are and a width of . Acacia sibirica is often difficult to separate from A. kempeana, which differs in usually having broader phyllodes (4–15 mm wide) and pods (8–20 mm wide) and in its seeds being oblique to transverse (whereas they are longitudinal to longitudinally oblique in A. sibirica).
The evergreen pyllodes have an ovate or elliptic shape and are usually straight or slightly sickle shaped. The glabrous phyllodes have a length of and a width of with three longitudinal nerves that are more prominent than the rest. When it blooms it produces simple inflorescences simple in pairs in the axils with cylindrical flower-spikes that are sub-densely flowered and have a length of in length but can reach up to in length. The seed pods that form after flowering are flat and glabrous and have a narrowly oblong shape with a length of and a width of .
The green phyllodes have a narrowly lanceolate to broadly ovate to broadly elliptic shape with a length of and a width of . It blooms from March to July or in September and produces yellow flowers. The inflorescences occur singly or in pairs with obloid or spike shaped flower- heads that are in length although they can also be spherical with a diameter of around (0.5–3.5 cm long) and are made up of yellow to bright yellow or orange-yellow coloured flowers. The thin brown woody seed pods that form after flowering have a narrowly oblanceolate to narrowly elliptic to linear shape.
Acacia equisetifolia is an erect grey-green shrub growing up to 1 m tall. The branchlets are densely villous with the weak hairs being about 1 mm long and white and slightly curved. The narrow needle-like phyllodes are arranged in whorls with from 10 to 17 per whorl, and each from 10–20 mm long, slender (0.3–0.4 mm wide), and ascending to erect when young, and when old, patent (at about right angles to the supporting stem). They are terete, almost terete or flattish, and a dull green, and tipped with a small point (from 0.1 to 0.3 mm long).
The tree has a slender and erect habit and typically grows to a height of up to . It has a bushy crown and usually has a single stem but can divide into several stems at ground level which have smooth grey coloured bark. The branchlets are usually pendulous and are angled or flattened and a reddish-brown often covered with a white powdery finish. It has straight or shallowly recurved, glabrous, blue-green to grey-green phyllodes that have a narrowly oblanceolate to narrowly elliptic or linear shape with a length of and a width of .
The species was first formally described by the botanist Ernst Georg Pritzel in 1904 as part of the work by Pritzel and Ludwig Diels, Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae occidentalis. Beitrage zur Kenntnis der Pflanzen Westaustraliens, ihrer Verbreitung und ihrer Lebensverhaltnisse as published in the journal Botanische Jahrbucher fur Systematik, Pflanzengeschichte und Pflanzengeographie. It was reclassified as Racosperma merinthophorum by Leslie Pedley in 2003 then transferred back into genus Acacia in 2006. The specific epithet is derived from the Greek language from the words merinthos meaning cord or string and phoreo meaning carry or wear in reference to the long thin shape of the phyllodes.
The species was first formally described by the botanists Joseph Maiden and William Blakely in 1927 as part of the work Descriptions of fifty new species and six varieties of western and northern Australian Acacias, and notes on four other species as published in the Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia. It was reclassified as Racosperma pachyacrum by Leslie Pedley in 2003 then returned to genus Acacia in 2006. The specific epithet is taken from Greek words pachys meaning thick and akron meaning top in reference to the thicken mucro at the end of the phyllodes.
The phyllodes have a broad lanceolate shape and can be straight or curved with a length of and a width of with thick longitudinal nerves and a prominent marginal nerve. The simple inflorescences occur singly in the axils as flower-spikes that are in length. The chartaceous, brown seed pods that form after flowering are shortly stipitate with a straight oblong shape and a length of up to and a width of . The seeds are transversely arranged in the pods and have an oblong shape with a length of up to and a width of and have a white aril.
The green to grey-green, flat and sub-rigid phyllodes have a narrowly linear shape and are straight to shallowly curved with a length of and a width of and are glabrous or with tiny hairs between the many, fine longitudinal nerves. It mostly blooms between July and September producing yellow coloured flowers. The simple inflorescences are often found in pairs in axils with short-obloid to cylindrically shaped flower-heads with a length of and a diameter of packed with golden coloured flowers. Following flowering thinly coriaceous-crustaceous seed pods that are straight to slightly curved form.
Acacia mitchellii, commonly known as Mitchell's wattle, is an erect or spreading shrub which is endemic to Australia. It grows to up to 2 metres high and has small bipinnate leaves. The pale yellow globular flowerheads appear in groups of 1 to 3 in the axils of the phyllodes followed by straight or curved seed pods which are 1.8 to 5 cm long and 4 to 8 mm wide. The species was first formally described by English botanist George Bentham in the London Journal of Botany in 1842 based on a collection made during Thomas Mitchell's expedition through the interior of New South Wales.
The thinly coriaceous and glabrous phyllodes have a length of and a width of and have yellow coloured margins and a straight to recurved tip along with many closely parallel non-prominent nerves. It flowers from June to September producing simple inflorescences that are found in pairs in the axils with long cylindrical flower-spikes with a diameter of loosely packed with bright golden coloured flowers. Following flowering thinly crustaceous and glabrous seed pods form that have a linear shape and are raised over and constricted between each of the seeds. The pods grow to as long as and have a width of with longitudinally arranged seeds inside.
A few species (such as Acacia glaucoptera) lack leaves or phyllodes altogether but instead possess cladodes, modified leaf-like photosynthetic stems functioning as leaves. The small flowers have five very small petals, almost hidden by the long stamens, and are arranged in dense, globular or cylindrical clusters; they are yellow or cream-colored in most species, whitish in some, or even purple (Acacia purpureopetala) or red (Acacia leprosa 'Scarlet Blaze'). Acacia flowers can be distinguished from those of a large related genus, Albizia, by their stamens, which are not joined at the base. Also, unlike individual Mimosa flowers, those of Acacia have more than ten stamens.
The grey-green phyllodes have a linear shape and can be straight to slightly incurved with a length of and a width of with three main nerves and an immersed to barely evident midrib. It blooms from September to October and produces yellow flowers. The rudimentary inflorescences occur as singly or in pairs along a raceme with an axis length of and have spherical flower-heads that have a diameter of containing 10 to 17 golden coloured flowers. Following flowering glabrous and chartaceous seed pods form that have a narrowly oblong to oblong shape with a length of up to and a width of .
Acacia fasciculifera shoot, showing phyllodes on the pinnate leaves, formed by dilation of the petiole and proximal part of the rachis Acacia, commonly known as the wattles or acacias, is a large genus of shrubs and trees in the subfamily Mimosoideae of the pea family Fabaceae.It comprises a group of plant Genera native to Africa and Australasia. The genus name is New Latin from the Greek word for 'thorn' from the habit of many species originally included in the genus. In the early 2000s when it had become evident that the genus as it stood was not monophyletic and that several divergent lineages needed to be placed in separate genera.
Acacia phlebophylla, a type of acacia also known by the names Buffalo sallow wattle and Mount Buffalo wattle, is a straggling shrub to small, twisted tree reaching up to 5 m in height. It is a close relative of Acacia alpina.World Wide Wattle It has large, elliptic, flat, commonly asymmetrical phyllodes 4–14 cm long, 1.5–6 cm wide, with coarse veins, a leathery feel, prominent nerves and reticulated veins. Deep yellow rod-like flowers appear in spring (June–December in Australia), widely scattered on spikes 4–7 cm long, followed by 7–10 cm long legumes in November–March, narrow, straight or slightly curved, releasing 5–10 elliptical seeds, 5–7.5 mm long.
Potamogeton × angustifolius is a hybrid between shining pondweed Potamogeton lucens and various-leaved pondweed Potamogeton gramineus. It is a perennial, growing from robust rhizomes. The stems are variable: slender to robust, terete, and branching, usually reaching 1.2 m but rarely up to 2m. The submerged leaves are reduced to phyllodes at the base of the stem, but elsewhere are broad and translucent, yellowish to dark green, sometimes with a pinkish tinge. The leaves measure 50-130 × 10–25 mm on the stems and main branches, but may be much smaller on the side branches; they have 4-5 (rarely 6) veins either side of the midrib and are usually sessile but some clones may have a few petiolate leaves.
Submersed leaves often modified into phyllodes, 10 – 45 cm long x 0.5 – 4 cm wide, linear to narrowly elliptical, of very variable shape and size, light-green, membraneously transparent, network between the veins often lighter or darker, thus the submersed leaves often appearing mosaic-like coloured. Emerse leaves long-petioled, 5 – 55 cm long, blades light-green, cordate, 5 – 12 cm long x 3 – 5 cm wide, in terrestrial dwarf forms the blades are ovate, truncate at the base, 2 – 5 cm long x 1 – 2 cm wide. In the blades there are very clear pellucid lines 1 – 5 mm (exceptionally up to 11 mm) long. Stem upright, inflorescence compound, branched in lower whorls. In terrestrial forms stem only 6 – 10 cm long.
Erect and bushy shrub or tree 4–6 m highLynch, A.J.J., (1994) Conservation biology and management of 16 rare or threatened Fabaceae species in Tasmania (Doctoral dissertation, University of Tasmania). (rarely to 9 m) and variable width belonging to the subgenus Phyllodineae. Bark and branches pruinose. Young branches are angular and may be reddish brown where exposed to direct sunlight.Pers. Obs. A.M.Pataczek Adult foliage is of flattened leaf stalks (known as Phyllodes), grey-green to a bluish-glaucous colour, glabrous, on raised stem-projections, variable in shape and size, (narrowly oblong- elliptic to oblanceolate, sometimes obovate) but more commonly obliquely elliptic, 2–6 cm (<10 cm) long, 8–20 mm (<50 mm) wide, with a sharp leaf tip, prominent thickened margins and midrib.
Acacia suaveolens (sweet wattle) is a shrub species endemic to Australia. It grows to between 0.3 and 3.5 metres high and has smooth purplish-brown or light green bark and has straight or slightly curving blue-green phyllodes The pale yellow to near white globular flower heads generally appear between April and September in its native range. These are followed by flattened, bluish oblong pods which are up to 2 to 5 cm long and 8 to 19 mm wide. The species was first formally described by English botanist James Edward Smith in 1791 in Transactions of the Linnean Society of London He described it with reference to a cultivated plant at Syon House which had been raised by Thomas Hoy from seed that originated from New South Wales.
They are removed with a small margin of normal breast tissue if the preoperative clinical investigations are suggestive of the necessity of this procedure. A small amount of normal tissue must be removed in case the lesion turns out to be a phyllodes tumour on microscopic examination. Because needle biopsy is often a reliable diagnostic investigation, some doctors may decide not to operate to remove the lesion, and instead opt for clinical follow-up to observe the lesion over time using clinical examination and mammography to determine the rate of growth, if any, of the lesion. A growth rate of less than sixteen percent per month in women under fifty years of age, and a growth rate of less than thirteen percent per month in women over fifty years of age have been published as safe growth rates for continued non-operative treatment and clinical observation.

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