Melaleucas and acacias

From Tropical Topics newsletter, No. 71, December 2001, produced by Stella Martin at the Queensland Environmental Protection Agency. Download the PDF to read the whole issue.

Melaleucas

Melaleucas sometimes grow alongside eucalypts, but they tend to dominate in areas which eucalypts avoid: low lying areas which are flooded in the wet season. Most species of melaleucas need some moisture below the surface so are often to be found where a clay subsoil exists below a sandy surface; areas where melaleucas grow should generally be avoided by drivers who do not wish to become bogged. Areas dominated by eucalypts are better drained and often sandy.

Some melaleucas, such as Melaleuca quinquenervia thrive in swampy areas where they grow, along with pandanus, in almost permanent water. However, other melaleucas are more at home in drier areas which are flooded only in the wet season. The thickly layered, papery bark protects the trees from moisture loss and from fire. Interestingly the name ‘melaleuca’ is derived from the Greek words melanos, meaning ‘black’, and leucos, meaning ‘white’. The first specimens described by Europeans had probably been recently burnt and the white branches were contrasted against a black trunk. Paperbark is a commonly used name but the name ‘teatree’ refers to both melaleucas and to members of the Leptospermum genus.

The bark of melaleucas has traditionally been put to many uses by indigenous people, notably as roofing material for shelters. The aromatic leaves yield essential oils with germicidal properties. M. cajuputi is the source of cajuput oil which has many useful properties, notably as a powerful anti-spasmodic stimulant. However, the presence of a harmful compound, cineole, in many melaleuca oils limits them to external use.

The broad-leaved paperbark (Melaleuca viridiflora) occurs across northern Australia. Depending on conditions, it may be a small straggly shrub or a straight trunked tree up to 18m tall. It is very adaptable, growing on steep mountain slopes on the edge of the Wet Tropics right through to swamps and coastal plains and most areas between. It can be a scattered shrub in a woodland, or a dominant species in shrubland

Bottlebrush

This tree has the largest and coarsest leaves and the largest flowers (stamens 2cm long) of all melaleucas. It flowers heavily with cream to yellowish-green ‘bottlebrush’ flowers (viridiflora means ‘green flowers’) which attract bees, butterflies, birds and flying foxes. The flowers are occasionally red.

Acacias

Acacias, also known as wattles, belong to the largest genus of flowering plants in Australia. One of the most widespread plant groups, they can be found growing in well-drained rainforest conditions but their main stronghold is the very driest parts of the Australian continent where rainfall is inadequate for eucalypts. Throughout the savanna woodlands, acacias may be found as an understorey or on shallow, gravely or sandy soils which are unsuitable for the more dominant eucalypts and melaleucas. They sometimes form quite large communities.

Acacias are well adapted to drought, poor soils and fire. In extremely dry times, acacias simply stop growing, and wait for rain. When it falls, water is directed by the branches towards the base of the trunk.

Most species, as adults have no leaves. They start life with small fern-like leaves (right) but as the little seedlings mature the leafstalks to which they are attached become enlarged and flattened. They outgrow the little leaves which eventually drop off. For the rest of its life, the plant will rely on these tough, flattened leaf stalks, called phyllodes, to perform as leaves. The advantage is that they lose less water than normal leaves.

Phyllodes generally have several main veins, running parallel to the edge, but no midrib vein. Tough, low in food value and containing unpalatable chemicals, they are unattractive to leaf-eating animals. At the base of each phyllode is a small gland which often produces nectar. This attracts ants, which act as an extra deterrent to herbivorous insects.

Acacias are legumes, so they have nodules in their roots containing bacteria which fix nitrogen from the atmosphere. This allows them to thrive in nutrient poor soils. Many of the seeds have an attachment, known as an elaiosome (below), which is rich in protein and oil. This is attractive to birds which digest the elaiosome, and pass the seeds. It also appeals to ants which ‘plant’ many seeds by carrying them underground into their nests. The hard, water-resistant coat of these seeds can only be fractured by high temperatures or abrasion which means that they often germinate at the best times  — when fire has produced a nutrient-rich ash bed.

acacia flowers

Acacia flowers are tiny but cluster together in ball-shaped or elongated groups. Their colour varies from cream to gold. One acacia species (A. purpureipetala), west of Herberton in Queensland, has purple flowers.

Australian versus African acacias

Acacias are found in all continents except Europe and Antarctica. They are particularly widespread in Africa — but close examination shows that these plants are very different, having evolved survival strategies which best suit conditions in their respective homelands.

Few Australian acacias have leaves. The phyllodes are unattractive to herbivores. African acacias all have leaves, which seem designed for browsing herbivores. (The spines on African acacias are designed to protect the developing leaf buds, not the leaves themselves, which fall to the ground if not eaten.)

Australian acacia seeds are sown by ants and birds, attracted by the elaiosome (not by the dry cast-off pods); in Africa, large mammals distribute their seeds after feeding on the nutritious pod (carob).

Australian acacias have bacteria in their roots which fix nitrogen; African ones provide a shady canopy which attracts mammals which provide nitrogen in the form of droppings.

In Australia, pods and litter around the acacias create intense fires which can kill the trees but provide good conditions for seeds to germinate and grow. In Africa, mammals attracted to the trees remove grass and keep fires mild.