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Acacia pendula, commonly known as the weeping myall, [1] true myall, myall, silver-leaf boree, [2] boree, [1] and nilyah, [3] is a species of wattle, which is native to Australia. The 1889 book The Useful Native Plants of Australia records that common names included "Weeping Myall", "True Myall", and Indigenous people of western areas of New ...
Silver birch (Betula pendula) Downy birch (Betula pubescens) Blackbean (Castanospermum australe) Blackwood Australian blackwood (Acacia melanoxylon) African blackwood, mpingo (Dalbergia melanoxylon) Bloodwood (Brosimum rubescens) [3] Boxelder (Acer negundo) Boxwood, common box (Buxus sempervirens) Brazilian walnut (Ocotea porosa) Brazilwood ...
Proposal 1584 on Acacia Taxon, Volume 53, Number 3, 1 August 2004, pp. 826–829 List of Acacia Species in the U.S. [ permanent dead link ] Seigler et al ., Mariosousa , a New Segregate Genus from Acacia s.l. (Fabaceae, Mimosoideae) from Central and North America, Novon: A Journal for Botanical Nomenclature: Vol. 16, No. 3, pp. 413–420
Acacia, commonly known as wattles [3] [4] or acacias, is a genus of about 1,084 species of shrubs and trees in the subfamily Mimosoideae of the pea family Fabaceae.
Amyema pendula, also known as drooping mistletoe or furry drooping mistletoe, [2] is a species of flowering plant, an epiphytic hemiparasitic plant of the family Loranthaceae, found attached to several species of Australian eucalypt and occasionally on some species of Acacia. It is endemic to south-eastern Australia.
Vachellia rigidula, commonly known as blackbrush acacia or chaparro prieto, and also known as Acacia rigidula, is a species of shrub or small tree in the legume family, Fabaceae. Its native range stretches from Texas in the United States south to central Mexico . [ 3 ]
Acacia paradoxa [2] is a plant in the family Fabaceae. Its common names include kangaroo acacia , [ 3 ] kangaroo thorn , prickly wattle , hedge wattle [ 4 ] and paradox acacia . Description
The leaves which are one of the plant's key traits are made up of 10–20 pairs of long thin leaves that go down a stem. They come in pairs of 3–12. One unique feature of A. angustissima is that it is thornless unlike most members of the genus Acacia [6] (which it formerly belonged to).