Eucalyptus is a diverse genus of trees (rarely shrubs), the members of which dominate the tree flora of Australia. There are more than 700 species of Eucalyptus, mostly native to Australia, with a very small number found in adjacent parts of New Guinea and Indonesia and one as far away as the Philippines. Eucalypts can be found in almost every part of the continent, adapted to all of Australia's climatic conditions; in fact, no other continent is so characterised by a single genus of tree as Australia is by eucalyptus. Many, but far from all, are known as gum trees; other names for various species include mallee, box, ironbark, stringybark, and ash.
Nearly all eucalypts are evergreen but some tropical species lose their leaves at the end of the dry season. As in other members of the Myrtle family, eucalypt leaves are covered with oil glands. The copious oils produced are an important feature of the genus. Eucalypts also exhibit leaf dimorphism. When young, their leaves are opposite, oval to roundish, and occasionally without a petiole. When one to a few years old, the leaves become alternate, lanceolate to falcate (sickle-shaped), quite slender and pendulous with longer petioles. The adult leaves of most species, as well as the juvenile leaves of some, are the same on both sides, lacking the distinction between upper and lower surfaces shown by the leaves of most plants. Most species do not flower until adult foliage starts to appear; E. cinerea and E. perriniana are notable exceptions.
The bark dies annually and species can be roughly grouped based on its appearance. In smooth-barked trees most of the bark is shed, leaving a smooth surface that is often colourfully mottled. With rough-barked trees the dead bark persists on the tree and dries out. Many trees, however, have smooth bark at the top but rough bark on the trunk or its bottom. The types of rough bark is often used to broadly label a group of eucalypts. They are:
A small genus of similar trees, Angophora, has also been known since the 18th century. In 1995 new evidence, largely genetic, indicated that some prominent eucalypt species were actually more closely related to Angophora than to the other eucalypts; they were split off into the new genus Corymbia. Although separate, the three groups are allied and it remains acceptable to refer to the members of all three genera Angophora, Corymbia and Eucalyptus as "eucalypts".
Today, specimens of the Australian Mountain Ash, Eucalyptus regnans, are among the tallest trees in the world at up to 92 metres in height and the tallest of all flowering plants; other taller trees such as the Coast Redwood are all conifers. There is credible evidence however that at the time of European settlement of Australia some Mountain Ash were indeed the tallest plants in the world.
Most eucalypts are not tolerant of frost, or only tolerate light frosts down to -3°C to -5°C; the hardiest, are the so-called Snow Gums such as Eucalyptus pauciflora which is capable of withstanding cold and frost down to about -20°C. Two sub-species, E. pauciflora niphophila and E. pauciflora debeuzevillei in particular are even hardier and can tolerate even quite severe continental type winters.
Several other species, especially from the high plateau and mountains of central Tasmania such as E. coccifera, E. subcrenulata, and E. gunnii have produced extreme cold hardy forms and it is seed procured from these genetically hardy strains that are planted for ornament in colder parts of the world.
The coolibah trees, referred to in Waltzing Matilda, are eucalypts E. coolabah and E. microtheca.
Eucalypts support the larvae of a number of Lepidoptera species - see list of Lepidoptera which feed on Eucalyptus.
Eucalypts originated between 35 and 50 million years ago, not long after Australia-New Guinea separated from Gondwana, their rise coinciding with an increase in fossil charcoal deposits (suggesting that fire was a factor even then), but they remained a minor component of the Tertiary rainforest until about 20 million years ago when the gradual drying of the continent and depletion of soil nutrients led to the development of a more open forest type, predominantly Casuarina and Acacia species. With the arrival of the first humans about 50 thousand years ago, fires became much more frequent and the fire-loving eucalypts soon came to account for roughly 70% of Australian forest.
Eucalypts regenerate quickly after fire. After the 2003 Canberra fires, hectares of imported species were killed, but in a matter of weeks the gum trees were putting out suckers and looking generally healthy.
The two valuable timber trees, Alpine Ash E. delegatensis and Mountain Ash E. regnans, are killed by fire and only regenerate from seed. The same fire that has had little impact on forests around Canberra has resulted in thousands of hectares of dead ash forests. There has been some debate as to whether to leave the stands, or attempt to harvest the mostly undamaged timber.
Eucalypts draw a tremendous amount of water from the soil through the process of transpiration. They have been planted (or re-planted) in some places to lower the water table and reduce soil salination. Eucalypts have also been used as a way of reducing malaria by draining the soil in Algeria, Sicily and also in Europe and California. Drainage removes swamps which provide a habitat for mosquito larvae. Eucalyptus oil is readily steam distilled from the leaves and can be used for cleaning, deodorising, and in very small quantities in food supplements; especially sweets, cough drops and decongestants.
The nectar of some eucalypts produces high quality honey. Perhaps the Karri and the Yellow box are the best known.
The ghost gum's leaves were used by Aborigines to catch fish. Soaking the leaves in water releases a mild tranquiliser which stuns fish temporarily.
One way in which the eucalypts, mainly the blue gum E. globulus, proved valuable in California was in providing windbreaks for highways, orange groves, and other farms in the mostly treeless central part of the state. They are also admired as shade and ornamental trees in many cities and gardens.
Eucalyptus forests in California have been criticized because they drive out the native plants and do not support native animals. Fire is also a problem. The 1991 Oakland Hills firestorm which destroyed almost 3,000 homes and killed 25 people was fueled by large numbers of eucalypts in the area.*
In some parts of California eucalyptus forests are being replaced with native trees and plants in an effort to restore California's indigenous landscape.
Image:Eucalyptus forest.jpg|Eucalyptus forest in East Gippsland, Victoria. Mostly Eucalyptus albens (white box). Image:Eucalyptus forest3.jpg|Eucalyptus forest in East Gippsland, Victoria. Mostly Eucalyptus albens (white box). Image:Eucalypt forest.jpg|Eucalyptus forest in East Gippsland, Victoria. Mostly Eucalyptus albens (white box). Image:Log embedded in white box.jpg|A log embedded in a Eucalyptus albens (white box) tree. Image:Eucalyptustreewithsun.JPG|A eucalyptus tree with the sun shining through its branches. Image:Eucalyptus tree.jpg|Eucalyptus Image:Applebox.JPG|Eucalyptus bridgesiana (Apple box) on Red Hill, Australian Capital Territory. image:euc.uk.600pix.jpg|Eucalyptus gunnii planted in southern England. The lower part of the trunk is covered in ivy. Image:Gumnut tree.jpg|Corymbia tree, growing in Melbourne, Australia Image:Eucalyptus cinera x pulverulenta.jpg|Cinera x Pulverulenta - National Botanical Gardens Canberra Image:Eucalyptus wildfire seeds.jpg|Eucalyptus wildfire seeds Image:Eucalyptus leucoxylon1.jpg|Eucalyptus leuxoxylon 'Rosea'
Australian plants | Medicinal herbs and fungi | Myrtales
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