Allocasuarina decaisneana
Desert Oak
Desert Oak
Wikipedia links: Angiosperms > Eudicots > Rosids > Fagales > Casuarinaceae > Allocasuarina decaisneana
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Common name: Desert Oak
The Anangu peoples know the tree as Kurkara
Conservation status: . . .
Etymology:
The name of the species honours the Belgian botanist Joseph Decaisne, who had never visited Australia or ever seen the tree
Flowers:
Trees will bloom between March and June forming fluffy red or brown flowers that are small in size
Fruit:
Cylindrical seed cones that subsequently develop are up to 10 cm in length
Its large cylindrical cones are the biggest in its family
Leaves:
Grey/green feathery foliage
Instead of leaves the tree has long segmented branchlets, known as cladodes, that resemble olive green pine needles
Each of the needles is composed of thin striped segments, which are leaf stalks, linked by a ring of projections, each of which is a tiny leaf
These perform the same function as leaves but conserve moisture
As the cladodes are shed from the tree they form a dense mat around the base preventing other plants from becoming established and competing for moisture and nutrients
Stem & branches:
Young trees have a narrow trunk
They mature to an adult form with spreading limbs and bushy foliage
The trees have a cork-like bark that is deeply furrowed and is known to protect the trees from fire
Roots:
The roots have nodules that contain nitrogen fixing bacteria, which allows them to survive in sandy soils with low nutrient levels
In the first few years, the slow growing tree develops a fast growing tap-root that can reach a depth of over 10 m and can reach any sub-surface water
Habit:
The dioecious tree typically grows to a height of 10 to 16 metres and as high as 20 m and a width of 3 to 8 m
Habitat:
It is a medium-sized, slow-growing tree found in the dry desert regions
Often found in swales between sand dunes they grow well in deep red sand
Distribution:
It is the only member of its family in Central Australia
The species is distributed through the deserts of the eastern part of central Western Australia, in the southern portion of the Northern Territory, and in northern South Australia
It is often the only tree species to be found in these area where the dominant form of vegetation is spinifex
Additional notes:
Cultivation
Desert oaks can be propagated by seed, but they are not easy to grow outside of their natural environment
Fire will burn the foliage but does not usually kill the tree
They are frost tolerant and drought tolerant
Taxonomy
The species was first formally described as Casuarina decaisneana by the botanist Ferdinand von Mueller in 1858 in the work Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae
It was reclassified in 1982 into the genus Allocasuarina by Lawrence Alexander Sidney Johnson in the Journal of the Adelaide Botanic Gardens
Uses
The tree was particularly useful to Indigenous Australian peoples who used the trees as a source of water
Water can be collected from tree hollows but surface roots could also be broken off in sections to provide potable water by draining the root when held vertically or by directly sucking the water out
The Aborigines also used the hard wood of the trees for making boomerangs, shields and clubs
A boomerang that is 10,000 years old made from Allocasuarina wood was found in Wylie Swamp in South Australia
In popular culture
The Aboriginal Community in South Australia, Oak Valley, on the southern edge of the Great Victoria Desert was established in 1985 for Anangu people displaced from Maralinga Lands following nuclear weapons testing takes its name from the tree
Sources of information: