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Mulga country intersperses with other vegetation such as spinifex, dominated by low mounds of Triodia, and wattle scrub or interrupted by granitic outcrops, salt lakes, and desert. The mulga itself is a mid-sized tree that is usually well-established in the open woodland, only occurring as young plants in disturbed areas, and is typically ...
Acacia ramulosa flower Acacia ramulosa fruit Acacia ramulosa foliage Horse mulga habitat. Acacia ramulosa, commonly known as horse mulga [1] [2] or bowgada wattle, [3] is a shrub belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Juliflorae endemic to arid areas of Australia.
Acacia aptaneura, commonly known as slender mulga, [2] is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to central and western parts of Australia. It is a usually an inverted cone-shaped or rounded shrub or tree, with linear or narrowly oblong phyllodes , spikes of golden-yellow flowers, and oblong to narrowly oblong pods ...
Hop mulga is a spreading or erect shrubby tree that typically grows to a height of 1.2 to 4 m (3 ft 11 in to 13 ft 1 in) but can grow as tall as 8 m (26 ft). [1] It has corky bark, [2] scurfy branchlets with resinous ribs and dark red-brown coloured new shoots. Like most Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. These are thick ...
Mulga (habitat), an Australian woodland or open forest habitat dominated by trees of the species Acacia; Mulga Lands, an Interim Biogeographic Regionalisation for Australia region of Australia; Mulga Creek, a river of New South Wales, Australia; Mulga Queen Community, a community Western Australia, Australia; Western Australian mulga shrublands ...
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 brachystachya (bra-chy-stà-chy-a -- pronounced 'brackeeSTAKEeea'), [1] commonly known as umbrella mulga, [2] turpentine mulga [1] or false bowgada, [3] is a shrub in the family Fabaceae. The species occurs in mulga and heath communities on sandhills and rocky ridges in all mainland states of Australia , except Victoria .
Mulga trees are a type of acacia which have adapted to efficiently collect the sparse rainfall, are the distinctive habitat of this ecoregion while the ground cover consists of shrubs and grasses. However the mulga lands are not uniform and there are micro-climates and patches of other kinds of habitat, especially areas of eucalyptus woodland ...