Eucalyptus accedens
{{Short description|Species of eucalyptus}}
{{speciesbox
|name = Powderbark wandoo
|image=Avon vally gnangarra-42.jpg
|image_caption=Eucalyptus accedens in the Avon Valley National Park
|genus = Eucalyptus
|species = accedens
| status = LC
| status_system = IUCN3.1
|authority = W.Fitzg.{{cite web|title=Eucalyptus accedens|url= https://biodiversity.org.au/nsl/services/apc-format/display/77647|publisher=Australian Plant Census|access-date=14 November 2020}}
}}
File:Powderbark bark (7159594145).jpg
File:Avon vally gnangarra-46.jpg
File:Avon vally gnangarra-35.jpg
Eucalyptus accedens, commonly known as smooth bark wandoo or powderbark wandoo is a species of tree endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. Although the common names suggest it is similar to wandoo, (Eucalyptus wandoo), the two species are very different botanically. The bark of E. accedens has talc-like powder, at least on the protected side of the trunk and the tree usually grows on laterite in higher places.{{cite book| author=Holliday, I.|title= A field guide to Australian trees |edition=3rd| location= Frenchs Forest, N.S.W.|publisher=New Holland|year=2002| isbn=978-1-876334-79-6}}{{cite book|last1=Gardner|first1=Charles A.|last2=Aplin|first2=Theodore E.H. (Ed.)|title=Eucalypts of Western Australia|date=1987|publisher=Western Australian Herbarium, Dept. of Agriculture, Western Australia|location=Perth|isbn=0724489983|pages=217–218}}
Description
Eucalyptus accedens is a tree which typically grows to a height of {{convert|15|to|25|m|ft}}{{FloraBase|name=Eucalyptus accedens|id=5545}} with branches high up the trunk and forms a lignotuber. Its diameter can be as large as {{convert|1.5|m|ft|0}} and hollows will readily form in dead branches or where limbs have fallen.{{cite web|url=https://naturemap.dpaw.wa.gov.au/(F(LcWl3M3MlZGNjT5iOZXaLdvv1gZeCfJG__KWFG8DU-2rMTukFSyF-S2E4_LbXqniMMQqCkMbSFh04CrCpX50KAp_WMXgrTcAOyHzXWOZwzcSCMi2KDb3110jQrLIGMbnXZQLEUOZjB7toA1OXozEC9X1FYQ1))/resources/acc/communities/POWDERBARK_WANDOO/Eucalyptus_accedens_(Powderbark_Wandoo)_Woodland.htm|title=Eucalyptus accedens|access-date=23 October 2016|work=Wheatbelt Woodlands|publisher=Department of Environment and Conservation}} The smooth bark is notable for being covered in a talc-like powder. It is pale-white when fresh, turning a shade of orange before being shed again. The adult leaves are arranged alternately and are the same dull blue-green colour on both sides. The blade is {{convert|8|to|18|cm|in|1}} in length and {{convert|1.2|to|3|cm|in|2|abbr=on}} wide with a lanceolate shape and tapers to a pointed tip. The leaf petioles are {{convert|1.3|to|3.2|cm|in|2|abbr=on}} long.{{cite web|url=https://apps.lucidcentral.org/euclid/text/entities/eucalyptus_accedens.htm?zoom_highlight=Eucalyptus+accedens|title=Powder-bark wandoo Eucalyptus accedens W.Fitzg., J. W. Austral. Nat. Hist. Soc. 1: 21 (1904)|access-date=23 October 2016|work=Euclid|publisher=CSIRO|year=2002}}
White flowers are produced between December and April. The inflorescence is single and axillary with a peduncle {{convert|0.7|to|1.7|cm|in|2|abbr=on}} long. It will form pedicellate buds in clusters of 7, 9 or 11, with cylindrical to obovoid or ovoid shape. It forms fruit that are pedicellate and cylindrical to barrel-shaped with a width of {{convert|0.5|to|0.9|cm|in|2|abbr=on}}. The fruits contain brown seeds with an ovoid or flattened-ovoid shape and a length of {{convert|1.5|to|2.5|mm|in|2|abbr=on}}.
Eucalyptus wandoo and E. accedens have a very similar appearance, but can be distinguished by the orangey coloured powdery coating on the bark of E. accedens that appears seasonally. It also has larger, more rounded buds and more rounded juvenile foliage.
Taxonomy and naming
Eucalyptus accedens was first formally described in 1904 by William Vincent Fitzgerald from specimens he had collected near Pingelly the previous year.{{cite web|title=Eucalyptus accedens|url=https://id.biodiversity.org.au/instance/apni/455165|publisher=APNI|access-date=5 November 2017}}{{cite journal|last1=Fitzgerald|first1=William V.|title=Additions to the West Australian flora|journal=Journal of the West Australian Natural History Society|date=1904|volume=2|issue=1|pages=21–22|url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/173540#page/23/mode/1up|access-date=5 November 2017}} The specific epithet (accedens) is a Latin word meaning "approaching" or "resembling", referring to the similarity of the bark of this species to that of E. wandoo.{{cite book |author=Francis Aubie Sharr |author-link=Francis Aubie Sharr |title=Western Australian Plant Names and their Meanings |date=2019 |publisher=Four Gables Press |location=Kardinya, Western Australia |isbn=9780958034180 |page=125}}
Distribution and habitat
Powderbark wandoo will grow in gravelly or clay-loam soils over laterite. It is commonly found on stony ridges or lateritic breakaways and often above stands of Eucalyptus wandoo. Its range extends from south east of Geraldton in the Mid West region south through the Darling Range as far as Williams, Western Australia in the Wheatbelt region.
Occurring on woodland areas, associated species include E. wandoo as E. wandoo often occurs below E. accedens in the overstorey landscape, and occasionally with E. astringens, and sometimes with E. marginata on the western fringe. In the understorey, shrubs such as Hypocalymma angustifolia, Hibbertia hypericoides, Hakea lissocarpha, Acacia pulchella, Hovea chorizemifolia, Gastrolobium microcarpum, Lepidosperma leptostachyum and Bossiaea eriocarpa are often found.
Conservation
This eucalypt is classified as "not threatened" by the Western Australian Government Department of Parks and Wildlife.
Uses
=Use in horticulture=
Eucalyptus accedens is now commonly sold as an ornamental shade or shelter tree. Bark is often used to deter ants. It tolerates a wide range of soil types except for lime and is reasonably drought tolerant and is available as seed or seedlings.{{cite web|url=http://ellenbytreefarm.com/products/eucalyptus-accedens-smooth-bark-wandoo|title=Eucalyptus accedens 'Smooth Bark Wandoo'|access-date=23 October 2016|year=2015|publisher=Ellenby Tree Farm}}{{cite web|url=https://www.apacewa.org.au/plant/eucalyptus-accedens/|title=Eucalyptus accedens|access-date=13 December 2023|publisher=Apace WA}}
The powder that accumulates on the trunk was tested as a deterrent for arthropods in 2004. The results demonstrated that ant mortality was much greater on paper discs coated with the powder than on control discs.{{cite web|url=http://www.rswa.org.au/publications/Journal/87(2)/vol87pt2notesmajer81-83.pdf|title=Powdery bark in Eucalyptus accedens deters arthropods? An evaluation using ants|access-date=23 October 2016|year=2004|author=J D Majer, R D Cocquyt and H F Recher|publisher=Royal Society of Western Australia}}