Eucalyptus vernicosa
Varnished Gum
Varnished Gum
Wikipedia links: Angiosperms > Eudicots > Rosids > Myrtaceae > Eucalyptus vernicosa
Other links:
Common name: Varnished 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 specific epithet is from the Latin word vernicosus meaning "varnished" or "shining", referring to the glossy appearance of the leaves
Flowers:
The flower buds are arranged in groups of three in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle up to 2 mm long, the individual buds sessile or almost so
Sometimes two of the buds in a group are lost so the buds appear singly
Mature buds are oval, 8–9 mm long and 3–5 mm wide, greenish brown and finely wrinkled with a conical operculum that is shorter than the floral cup
Flowering occurs in most months, peaking from December to February and the flowers are white
Fruit:
The fruit is a woody hemispherical or bell-shaped capsule 5–8 mm long and 5–9 mm wide
It has valves near rim level
Leaves:
Young plants and coppice regrowth have crowded, sessile, glossy green, egg-shaped leaves
These are 7–20 mm long and 3–15 mm wide and arranged in opposite pairs
Adult leaves are crowded, glossy green, egg-shaped to elliptical or round
10–32 mm long and 8–15 mm wide with a rounded base
On a petiole 1–8 mm long, arranged in opposite pairs or alternately
Stem & branches:
It has smooth grey or greyish brown bark
Roots:
Habit:
A species of shrub or a mallee
It typically grows to a height of 1 m or a mallee to 4 m
It forms a lignotuber
Habitat:
It grows between 700 m and 1350 m above sea level, usually on peaty acid soils on top of quartzite or sandstone bedrock
It is usually found above the tree line, and can be a dominant component of alpine heath communities, along with Richea, Athrotaxis, and Orites
This habitat typically has high average rainfall varying from 1000 mm to 2500 mm per year, and very cold winters with continuous frosts and snow for several months
The harsh climate and nutritiously poor soils probably explain the small size and tough leaves
Distribution:
Endemic to mountainous areas of Tasmania
It is only found in alpine regions in the west to southwest, including Cradle Mountain
Additional notes:
Taxonomy
Eucalyptus vernicosa was first formally described in 1847 by Joseph Dalton Hooker in William Jackson Hooker's London Journal of Botany from specimens collected by Ronald Campbell Gunn on "Mount Fatigue, altitude 4000 feet"
A specimen of Actinotus bellidoides held in the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, also collected on "Mount Fatigue" gives its location as "about 12 to 16 miles S.S.W. off [the St] Clair and about 4000 ft High [Van Dieman's Land]"
Mount Arrowsmith is found at approximately this location, and was named "Fatigue Hill" until 1855
Eucalyptus vernicosa has been traditionally cited as an example of a morphological continuum with E. johnstonii, and E. subcrenulata
A study from Mount Arrowsmith showed a strong relationship within those three species, linking altitude with changes in glaucousness, leaf morphology, growth rates, habit, capsule shape, bark thickness and degree of frost resistance
It was suggested that they represented close relatives of one species that was diverging to adapt to an environmental cline
However more recent genetic studies show that E. vernicosa is more distantly related to the E. johnstonii/E. subcrenulata complex, and the apparent morphological clinal intergradation between E. vernicosa and E. subcrenulata is probably a result of parallel evolution
Uses
Use in horticulture
A number of Tasmanian alpine Eucalypts, including E. vernicosa, are grown as ornamental trees and shrubs in Europe, and especially in the United Kingdom, due to their evergreen habit and similarity of climate
Essential oils
In the early 20th century E. vernicosa was harvested for its oil, which was believed to have medicinal properties
Sources of information: