词条 | Eucalyptus stricklandii |
释义 |
|name = Strickland's gum |image = Goldfields Yellow Flowering Gum in Primer of Forestry Poole 1922.png |image_caption = Mature tree with man standing at right |status_system = |status = |genus = Eucalyptus |species = stricklandii |authority = Maiden }}Eucalyptus stricklandii, commonly known as Strickland's gum, is a tree that is native to Western Australia.[1]{{quote|A tree of 20 to 30 feet, with a light brown bark covered with grey flakes which peel off. The branches are very widely spreading or even drooping. The young branches are covered with a white powder, and the leaves are large, thick, and of a blue-green colour, usually above six inches long. The flowers are very handsome, being of a bright yellow, and one and a-half inches across. The buds are blunt, nearly half an inch long, and the fruits are distinctly bell-shaped, half an inch long, and as broad, clustered at the end of a broad flat stalk. The tree occurs to the south of Coolgardie and near Norseman, and is found on gravelly hills. — Charles Lane-Poole, Primer of Forestry. 1922[2]|sign=|source=}} See also
References1. ^{{FloraBase|name=Eucalyptus stricklandii|id=5780}} {{Taxonbar|from=Q15356121}}2. ^{{cite book |last1=Lane-Poole |first1=C. E. |authorlink1=Charles Lane-Poole |title=A primer of forestry, with illustrations of the principal forest trees of Western Australia. |date=1922 |publisher=F.W. Simpson, government printer |location=Perth |page=44 |url=https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.61019 |language=en}} 5 : Rosids of Western Australia|Trees of Australia|Eucalyptus|Myrtales of Australia|Plants described in 1911 |
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