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Acacia aneura, commonly known as mulga, [3] is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to inland Australia. It is a variable shrub or small tree with flat, narrowly linear to elliptic phyllodes , cylindrical spikes of bright yellow flowers and more or less flat and straight, leathery pods .
Acacia aneura. Mulga is a type of habitat composed of woodland or open forest dominated by the mulga tree, Acacia aneura, or similar species of Acacia. [1] Regions
The Western Australian Mulga shrublands is a deserts and xeric shrublands ecoregion of inland Western Australia. [2] It is one of Australia's two mulga ecoregions, characterized by dry woodlands of mulga trees (Acacia aneura and related species) interspersed with areas of grassland and scrub. [3] [1] [4]
Acacia aneura var. pilbarana, commonly known as Mulga, is a perennial shrub native to Western Australia. [1] Acacia aneura var. pilbarana has ten recognized varieties, six of which are found in the Pilbara region.
Acacia aneura (mulga or true mulga, a shrub or tree native to Australia) Mulga apple, its edible gall; Any of many similar Acacia species, such as: Acacia brachystachya (umbrella mulga) Acacia citrinoviridis (black mulga) Acacia craspedocarpa (hop mulga) Acacia cyperophylla (red mulga)
The Mulga Lands are an interim Australian bioregion of eastern Australia consisting of dry sandy plains with low mulga woodlands and shrublands that are dominated by Acacia aneura (mulga). [2] The Eastern Australia mulga shrublands ecoregion is coterminous with the Mulga Lands bioregion.
The mulga apple is in fact a combination of plant and animal; the insect gall grows inside the wood of the mulga tree (Acacia aneura). Without the wasp the gall would not be induced. [1] Mulga apple is known as Merne ataltyakwerle in the Arrernte language of Central Australia. Mulga trees grow in flat country and at the foot of hills.
The park is located in the Mulga Lands Bioregion which extends from north western NSW into south western Queensland, [6] and contains a range of landforms, each of which supports unique vegetation communities and ecosystems. [4] The predominant vegetation type of this bioregion is dominated by mulga (Acacia aneura) and other woody shrub species ...