Gmelina leichhardtii
White Beech
White Beech
Wikipedia links: Angiosperms > Eudicots > Asterids > Lamiales > Lamiaceae > Gmelina leichhardtii
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Common name: White Beech
White beech is the standard trade name for the timber, as well as a common name for the species, due to the similarity of the wood to that of European beech, Fagus sylvatica, which is not closely related
Other common names include grey teak
Conservation status: Least concern (Qld)
The White beech had dense populations in Caloundra before European settlement
Unlike the Australian red cedar, the white beech has not recovered particularly well after logging in the 19th and 20th centuries
Lowland Rainforest provided one of the world‟s most prized cabinet timbers to earlyEuropean settlers
Toona ciliata (red cedar) was in huge demand as a cabinet timber within Australia and overseas
When the red cedar resource was exhausted, the loggers turned their attention to Gmelina leichhardtii (white beech) and Araucaria cunninghamii (hoop pine)
Etymology:
The genus name honours German botanist Johann Georg Gmelin
The species name honours Leichhardt, who explored and collected specimens from the country's east and north
Flowers:
Purple, yellow and white flowers form in late spring and summer
Fruit:
The fruit are ripe from February to May
The fruit is consumed by the topknot pigeon and wompoo fruit dove
Leaves:
Considered by some to be a semi-deciduous species, losing part of the canopy in late spring
Green leaves are almost always found at the base of the tree, assisting with tree identification
The mature leaves are pale green and ovate, 8 to 18 cm long
Hairy and veiny on the underside
Midrib, lateral and net veins distinct on the upper surface, conspicuously raised and distinct beneath due to the covering of fawn hairs
Lateral veins eight to ten, straight and forking near the margin at 45 degrees to the midrib
Juvenile leaves are toothed
Stem & branches:
The base of the largest trees exceeds 2.5 m in diameter, and the trunk is cylindrical with a flanged but not buttressed base
The flanging can extend up the bole
The bark varies from light to dark grey and has a scaled surface with vertical cracks marking sections of trunk
There can be burls
Branchlets are thick, grey or brown and hairy, with easily visible leaf scars
The new shoots are densely covered in fine fur
Roots:
Habit:
A fast-growing tree
Mature specimens reach 15 to 30 m tall, though exceptional individuals can reach 60 m tall, and live for centuries
Habitat:
On volcanic and alluvial soils in areas of moderate to high rainfall. It also grows on poorer sedimentary soils in fire free areas
White beech may occasionally be seen in Australian rainforests, though their status is considered "uncommon"
It is found on mountain slopes as well as alluvial soils along riverbanks
On Fraser Island it is even found on sand hills
The usual habitat is subtropical rainforest, where trees occur singly or in small stands of up to five individuals scattered through the forest, associated with such trees as yellow carabeen (Sloanea woollsii), red carabeen (Geissois benthamiana), Queensland kauri pine (Agathis robusta), golden sassafras (Doryphora sassafras), black booyong (Argyrodendron actinophyllum) and white booyong (A. trifoliolatum), as well as members of the genus Flindersia
Distribution:
Eastern Australia
Scattered individuals or small groups of trees naturally occur from the Illawarra district of NSW (34½° S) to near Proserpine in tropical Queensland
The main range is from the Blackall Range and the vicinity of Maleny south through to the NSW south coast
The locality of Broughtonvale (34½° S), near Berry, New South Wales is considered by Anders Bofeldt as the southern limit of natural distribution
However, D.J. Boland considers the far more southerly Clyde River, NSW (35° S) near Batemans Bay to be the southern limit of distribution
There are isolated occurrences in central-northern Queensland in the Eungella Range and on Mt Elliot near Townsville
North of Sydney, it was officially recorded in the Wyong area in 1916.[8] and is still present in rainforest along Ourimbah Creek
White beech is rare and endangered in the Illawarra region
It is likely that fewer than one hundred trees remain in some thirty different sites in the Illawarra
White beech trees in the Illawarra may be seen by the Minnamurra Falls rainforest walk in Budderoo National Park, however, these trees are not signposted
Additional notes:
Taxonomy
Ferdinand von Mueller described the white beech as Vitex leichhardtii in 1862, from collections near Myall Creek by Ludwig Leichhardt and Clarence River by Dr. Hermann Beckler
George Bentham reassigned it to the genus Gmelina in his 1870 Flora Australiensis.
It was previously classified in the Verbenaceae, but its genus and many others have been transferred into the mint family Lamiaceae
Germination
Around Easter time, seeds mature within a fleshy bluish or purple drupe 2 to 3 cm in diameter
These are eaten by the wompoo fruit dove, paradise riflebird, topknot pigeon and possibly other large fruit eating birds
The fruit contains a hard wooden capsule
The capsule contains four cells, each with a viable or non-viable seed
The fleshy aril needs to be removed, as it contains agents which inhibit seed germination
Regular watering and drying of the capsules seems to improve germination results
Germination is slow and unreliable, taking between six months and four years
Seedlings usually appear in late spring and summer.
A successful technique for germinating white beech is to collect new purple fruit
Cut off the fleshy aril
Place the wooden "nut" in the sun for a few days
When cracks appear around the emerging seed compartments, place it in a large container
Ensure the capsule receives adequate moisture and warmth in the cooler months
Trying to open the hard nut in the middle of the fruit, or hitting the capsule with a hammer has proven useless
The best technique appears to be the removal of the outer blue/purple fleshThen exposing the inner capsule to sunlight and moisture
The sunlight cracks the outer covering of the capsule
The moisture seeps through the outer shell, affecting the inner seed
When the seed is germinated, it pushes open the cells of the capsule
The majority of capsules will not produce seedlings
A large quantity of capsules is advised for propagation
Timber and uses
The timber is durable and greyish without significant markings
However, it splits when nailed
It is prized for templates, pattern making, house construction, planking for boat hulls, flooring, carriage work, wood carving and cabinet work
It weighs around 550 kg per cubic metre
This tree is well suited to parks and large gardens
Gmelina leichhardtii is also seen as a shade tree in farms in former rainforest areas
Source of information:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gmelina_leichhardtii (Feb 2024)
Lowland Rainforest of Subtropical Australia listing advice: https://sites.google.com/d/1dj0l4gAbXxXjqZuG6jfDPm2icT0kP_7-/p/12IwB9t6_ErBMC8Qyrb2xDPgmLGaNkntg/edit (Feb 2024)
https://apps.des.qld.gov.au/species-search/details/?id=12384 (Feb 2024)