Eucalyptus globulus
Blue Gum
Blue Gum
Wikipedia links: Angiosperms > Eudicots > Rosids > Myrtaceae > Eucalyptus globulus
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Common name: Blue Gum
Also, southern blue gum
Conservation status: Least concern
Etymology:
The name Eucalyptus is from the Ancient Greek words eu meaning 'good'and kalypto meaning '(I) cover, conceal, hide', referring to the operculum covering the flower buds
The species name is from the Latin globulus, a little ball or small sphere, referring to the shape of the fruit
Flowers:
The flower buds are arranged singly or in groups of three or seven in leaf axils, sometimes sessile or on a short thick peduncle
The individual buds are also usually sessile, sometimes on a pedicel up to 5 mm long
Mature buds are top-shaped to conical, glaucous or green, with a flattened hemispherical, warty operculum with a central knob
Flowering time varies with subspecies and distribution but the flowers are always white
Fruit:
The fruit is a woody conical or hemispherical capsule with the valves close to rim level
Leaves:
Juvenile leaves are mostly arranged in opposite pairs, sessile, glaucous elliptic to egg-shaped, up to 150 mm long and 105 mm wide
Adult leaves are arranged alternately, the same glossy to dark green on both sides, lance-shaped or curved, 150–300 mm long and 17–30 mm wide on a petiole 1.5–6 mm long
Stem & branches:
The bark is usually smooth, white to cream-coloured
There are sometimes slabs of persistent, unshed bark at the base
Young plants, often several metres tall, and coppice regrowth have stems that are more or less square in cross-section with a prominent wing on each corner
Roots:
Habit:
It is a tall, evergreen tree
It typically grows to a height of 45 m but may sometimes only be a stunted shrub
Alternatively, under ideal conditions, it can grow as tall as 90–100 m
It forms a lignotuber
Habitat:
Distribution:
Endemic to southeastern Australia
There are four subspecies, each with a different distribution across Australia, occurring in NSW, Victoria and Tasmania
The subspecies are the Victorian blue gum, Tasmanian blue gum, Maiden's gum, and Victorian eurabbie
Blue gum grows in forests in NSW, Victoria and Tasmania, including some of the Bass Strait Islands
Subspecies bicostata occurs in montane and tableland areas between the Carrai Plateau in northern NSW and the Pyrenees in Victoria
Subspecies globulus is mainly found in lowland parts of Tasmania, but is also found on some Bass Strait islands including King Island, and in the extreme south-west of Victoria
Subspecies maidenii occurs on near-coastal ranges of south-eastern New South Wales and eastern Victoria.
Subspecies pseudoglobulus is mostly distributed in eastern Gippsland but there are isolated populations further inland and in the Nadgee Nature Reserve in south-eastern NSW
There are naturalised non-native occurrences in Spain and Portugal, and other parts of southern Europe incl. Cyprus, southern Africa, New Zealand, western United States (California), Hawaii, Macaronesia
Additional notes:
Taxonomy and naming
A species of flowering plant in the family Myrtaceae
Eucalyptus globulus was first formally described in 1800 by the French botanist Jacques Labillardière in his book, Relation du Voyage à la Recherche de la Pérouse
Labillardière collected specimens at Recherche Bay during the d'Entrecasteaux expedition in 1792
The d'Entrecasteaux expedition made immediate use of the species when they discovered it, the timber being used to improve their oared boats
The Tasmanian blue gum was proclaimed as the floral emblem of Tasmania on 27 November 1962
In 1974, James Barrie Kirkpatrick described four subspecies and the names have been accepted by the Australian Plant Census
Each subspecies has a characteristic arrangement of its flower buds:
Eucalyptus globulus subsp. bicostata (Maiden, Blakely & Simmonds) J.B.Kirkp. (formerly Eucalyptus bicostata), commonly known as Victorian blue gum or eurabbie, has sessile flower buds arranged in groups of three
Eucalyptus globulus Labill. subsp. globulus, commonly known as Tasmanian blue gum, has flower buds arranged singly in leaf axils
Eucalyptus globulus subsp. maidenii (F.Muell.) J.B.Kirkp. (formerly Eucalyptus maidenii), commonly known as Maiden's gum has flower buds arranged in groups of seven
Eucalyptus globulus subsp. pseudoglobulus (Naudin) J.B.Kirkp. (formerly Eucalyptus globulus var. pseudoglobulus), commonly known as Victorian eurabbie has pedicellate flower buds arranged in groups of three
Unusual specimens
They typically grow from 30–55 m tall
There are historical claims of even taller trees with Robert Edwards Carter Stearns claiming that when he was alive, they were capable of growing to 400 feet
While this claim is often regarded as being exaggerated, the environmentalist Jared Diamond argues in favor of this claim, stating that such trees were likely cut down during the colonisation of Australia by the English
Tasmanian D. W. Lewin claimed that the tallest was 101 m
Plantations
Main article: Eucalyptus § Eucalyptus as plantation species
Large blue gum eucalyptus in Pleasanton, California – 46.5 m in height and 10.5 m in circumference
Blue gum is one of the most extensively planted eucalypts. Its rapid growth and adaptability to a range of conditions is responsible for its popularity
It is especially well-suited to countries with a Mediterranean-type climate, but also grows well in high altitudes in the tropics
It comprises 65% of all plantation hardwood in Australia with approximately 4,500 km2 planted
In about 1860 Francis Cook planted the tree on Monserrate Palace, his property at Sintra in Portugal and within twenty years it had attained the height of 100 m and a circumference of 5 m.[citation needed][dubious – discuss]
By 1878 the tree ″had spread from one end of Portugal to the other″
In 1878 the tree was also planted, partly on Cook's recommendation, in Galway, Ireland to reclaim ″useless bog land″
E. globulus begun to be planted as plantations in Los Lagos and Los Ríos regions of Chile in the 1990s
However at these latitudes around the 40th parallel south the tree is at the southern border of the climatic conditions where it can grow, hence good growth in this part of southern Chile requires good site selection such as sunny north-facing slopes
Some of these plantations grow on red clay soil
Uses
Timber
Blue gum timber is yellow-brown, fairly heavy, with an interlocked grain, and is difficult to season
It has poor lumber qualities due to growth stress problems, but can be used in construction, fence posts and poles
Pulpwood
Main article: Eucalyptus § Pulpwood
Essential oil
The leaves are steam distilled to extract eucalyptus oil. E. globulus is the primary source of global eucalyptus oil production, with China being the largest commercial producer
The oil has therapeutic, perfumery, flavoring, antimicrobial and biopesticide properties
Oil yield ranges from 1.0-2.4% (fresh weight), with cineole being the major isolate. E. globulus oil has established itself internationally because it is virtually phellandrene free, a necessary characteristic for internal pharmaceutical use
In 1870, Cloez identified and ascribed the name "eucalyptol" — now more often called cineole — to the dominant portion of E. globulus oil
Herb tea
Tasmanian blue gum leaves are used as a herbal tea
Phenolics
E. globulus bark contains quinic, dihydroxyphenylacetic and caffeic acids, bis(hexahydroxydiphenoyl (HHDP))-glucose, galloyl-bis(HHDP)-glucose, galloyl-HHDP-glucose, isorhamentin-hexoside, quercetin-hexoside, methylellagic acid (EA)-pentose conjugate, myricetin-rhamnoside, isorhamnetin-rhamnoside, mearnsetin, phloridzin, mearnsetin-hexoside, luteolin and a proanthocyanidin B-type dimer, digalloylglucose and catechin
The hydrolyzable tannins tellimagrandin I, eucalbanin C, 2-O-digalloyl-1,3,4-tri-O-galloyl-β-D-glucose, 6-O-digalloyl-1,2,3-tri-O-galloyl-β-D-glucose, as well as gallic acid and (+)-catechin can also be isolated
Tricetin is a rare flavone aglycone found in the pollen of members of the Myrtaceae, subfamily Leptospermoideae, such as E. globulus
Sources of information: