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Acacia baileyana or Cootamundra wattle is a shrub or tree in the flowering plant family Fabaceae. The scientific name of the species honours the botanist Frederick Manson Bailey. It is indigenous to a very small area in southern inland New South Wales, comprising Temora, Cootamundra, Stockinbingal and Bethungra districts. However, it has been ...
Torrent Pharmaceuticals was established in 1959 by U. N. Mehta as Trinity Laboratories. It was renamed as Torrent Pharmaceuticals in 1971. [5] In 1997, Torrent Pharma and Sanofi established a 50:50 joint venture called Sanofi Torrent for selling Torrent Pharma's products. [6] Torrent exited the joint venture by selling its stake to Sanofi in ...
Cootamundra, nicknamed Coota, is a town in the South West Slopes region of New South Wales, Australia and within the Riverina. It is within the Cootamundra-Gundagai Regional Council. At the 2016 Census, Cootamundra had a population of 6,782. It is located on the Olympic Highway at the point where it crosses the Muttama Creek, between Junee and ...
Woman buying wattle for Wattle Day, Sydney, 1935 Wattle Day is a day of celebration in Australia on the first day of September each year, [ 1 ] which is the start of the Australian spring. [ 2 ] This is the time when many Acacia species (commonly called wattles in Australia), are in flower.
Acacia melleodora flowers Acacia melleodora foliage and flowers. Acacia melleodora, commonly known as scented wax wattle, [1] waxy wattle, [2] honey wattle [3] or honey scented wattle, [4] is a shrub belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Phyllodineae that is endemic to arid parts of central Australia.
Callicoma serratifolia is commonly known as black wattle. One explanation for the name is the similarity of the flowers to those of Australian Acacia , which are commonly known as wattles. Another explanation is its use in wattle and daub huts of the early settlers. [ 1 ]
Acacia glandulicarpa, commonly known as the hairy-pod wattle, is a perennial shrub belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Phyllodinea that is native to parts of south eastern Australia. The shrub typically grows to a height of 1 to 2 m (3 ft 3 in to 6 ft 7 in) and has a dense and spreading habit.
Acacia atrox, commonly known as Myall Creek wattle, [3] is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to a small area in New South Wales.It is a dense, small shrub or tree that often forms suckers with sharply-pointed, more or less rigid, terete phyllodes, cream-coloured to pale yellow flowers arranged in a spherical head of 17 to 41 in axils.