Allocasuarina fraseriana
Western She-oak
Western She-oak
Overview:
Wikipedia links: Angiosperms > Eudicots > Rosids > Fagales > Casuarinaceae > Allocasuarina fraseriana
Other links:
Common name: Western She-oak
Also, common sheoak, WA sheoak or Fraser's sheoak
The Noongar peoples know the tree as kondil. condil, kulli or gulli
Conservation status: unknown
Etymology:
The specific name fraseriana honours the botanist Charles Fraser
Flowers:
Male trees have small brown flower spikes at the end of branchlets
Flowering is prolific, giving male trees a rusty brown hue during flowering in late winter and early spring
Female trees bear small flowers on short branchlets of their own
Fertilised flowers develop egg-shaped cones from 1½ to 3½ centimetres in diameter
Fruit:
Leaves:
As with other Allocasuarina species, its "foliage" consists of slender green branchlets informally referred to as "needles" but more correctly termed cladodes
The cladodes are segmented, and the true leaves are tiny teeth encircling each joint
Stem & branches:
Roots:
Habit:
In ideal conditions, Western Sheoak grows to a height of about 15 m
Where exposed to salty coastal breezes, however, it is usually somewhat smaller
It usually has a diameter of 0.5 to 1 m at breast height
Habitat:
Distribution:
Endemic to Western Australia, it occurs near the coast in the south west corner of the State, from Jurien (30° S) to Albany (35° S)
The tree has a distribution from with the bulk of the population being found in the South West hinterland to the Great Southern regions of Western Australia with smaller populations being found between Jurien and Moora
It grows in lateritic soils in the understorey of Eucalyptus marginata forest on the Darling Range and in areas near the coast it is found in sandy soils in woodland and open forest
Additional notes:
History
Western Sheoak was first collected in 1840 by Johann Preiss
The species was first formally described as Casuarina fraseriana by Friedrich Anton Wilhelm Miquel in 1848, Revisio critica Casuarinarum and later revised into the Allocasuarina genera by Lawrence Alexander Sidney Johnson in 1982 in the work Notes on Casuarinaceae II in the Journal of the Adelaide Botanic Gardens
Uses
Noongar women give birth beneath the tree because of the soft needles
The needles were also used for bedding in shelters and often covered with a kangaroo skin cloak to make a bed.
The wood was used to make boomerangs
Early settlers of Western Australia used sheoak timber for roof shingles
Later it was used in the construction of kegs and casks
Today, the timber is prized for its broad medullary rays, and is often used for wood-turning and carving of decorative ornaments
The sapwood is a pale yellow colour and the heartwood is dark-red to brown
The texture is moderately fine and even
Green wood has a density is about 1000 kg/m2, the density of air-dried wood is about 730 kg/m3
The seed of the plant is favoured by red-eared firetails (Stagonopleura oculata), an endemic grass finch
Sources of information: