Lomatia tasmanica
King's Lomatia
King's Lomatia
Image by: By: Tapson, Natalie (2009-12-06)
Image by: Fagg, M (2009-06-13)
Images downloaded from the Atlas of Living Australia
https://bie.ala.org.au/species/https://id.biodiversity.org.au/node/apni/2903191
Wikipedia links: Angiosperms > Eudicots > Basal Eudicots > Proteales > Proteaceae > Lomatia tasmanica
Other links: https://bie.ala.org.au/species/https://id.biodiversity.org.au/node/apni/2903191#overview
Common name: King's Lomatia
It is also sometimes called "King's holly", though it is not a holly
Conservation: Critically endangered
A highly endangered shrub which is known from just a single small population in southwestern Tasmania
Etymology:
Lomatia: from Greek loma, a fringe, referring to the wing that surrounds the seed
Flowers:
It only flowers occasionally
Bears red flowers in the summer, but yields neither fruit nor seeds
Flowering takes place in February
The terminal flowerheads, or inflorescences are 9–10 cm long
Fruit:
Fruit production has never been observed and it is believed to propagate only vegetatively
It is believed to be a natural triploid a phenomenon that is not rare in plants but which often results in sterility due to an inability to form functional gametes (sperm and egg cells) during meiosis
When a branch falls, that branch grows new roots, establishing a new plant that is genetically identical to its parent
Leaves:
Shiny green pinnate (lobed) leaves
The leaves are alternately arranged and more crowded towards the ends of branches
Roughly oval in shape, they are 10–18 cm long and pinnate, made up of 11 to 25 primary lobes that have irregularly toothed margins and are sometimes subdivided into smaller lobes
The upper surface is green and shiny, while the undersurface is partly hairy, particularly along the midrib
Stem & branches:
The trunks of very old plants can reach diameters of 8 cm
The upper branchlets are covered in fine rusty fur
The stems may grow roots from nodes on the ground
Roots:
Habit:
Straggly shrubs or small trees to 8 m high
Taller or longer trunked specimens are often bent over
Habitat:
The species occurs in a diversity of riparian habitats ranging from mixed forest to sclerophyll scrub and regenerating implicate rainforest (a type of low cool temperate rainforest, usually less than 20 m in height, with a dense, tangled understorey from canopy level down to the ground)
It is most common in the implicate rainforest where there is very high humidity
The climate is wet, receiving an average total of 1700 mm of rain each year
All plants grow within 25 m of a river or creek
Mainly grows in rainforest or mixed forest made up of trees 8–15 m high such as:
myrtle beech (Lophozonia cunninghamii)
celery-top pine (Phyllocladus aspleniifolius)
southern sassafras (Atherosperma moschatum)
leatherwood (Eucryphia lucida)
satinwood (Nematolepis squamea)
blue-green tea tree (Leptospermum glaucescens)
and horizontal scrub (Anodopetalum biglandulosum)
as well as understory species such as:
thyme archeria (Archeria serpyllifolia)
native plum (Cenarrhenes nitida)
sweet-scented trochocarpa (Trochocarpa gunnii)
Raukaua gunnii
white waratah (Agastachys odorata)
climbing heath (Prionotes cerinthoides)
hard water fern (Parablechnum wattsii)
brickmaker's sedge (Gahnia grandis)
Scattered Smithton peppermint (Eucalyptus nitida) tower over the canopy
Profuse moss and fern growth highlights the wetness of the habitat
It also extends into neighbouring dry sclerophyll forest composed of Smithton peppermint over an understory of blue-green tea tree on more elevated areas
Finally, it grows in a dense riverbank scrubland with species such as:
silver banksia (Banksia marginata)
mānuka (Leptospermum scoparium)
prickly-leaved wattle (Acacia verticillata)
swamp honey-myrtle (Melaleuca squamea)
scented paperbark (M. squarrosa)
horizontal scrub, and Smithton peppermint over a dense low understory of Bauera rubioides, Gahnia grandis, Epacris aff. heteronema, scrambling coral fern (Gleichenia microphylla), Calorophus erostris, lesser wire rush (Empodisma minus), and button grass (Gymnoschoenus sphaerocephalus)
Distribution:
Native to Tasmania
Only one colony is known to be alive in the wild, consisting of about 600 plants over an area 1.2 km in length in southwestern Tasmania
All of the plants are genetically identical clones
Additional notes:
Rarity of species
Allozyme data collected in the late 1990s suggest that the world population of this species consists of a single vegetatively propagated clone
The extreme rarity of this species, its inability to reproduce sexually, and its lack of any (known) genetic diversity conspire to make it highly vulnerable to extinction in the near future
Major threats include too-frequent fires and the root-rot fungus Phyophthora cinnamomi
As of 2004, the entire world population consisted of around 600 ramets (i.e., plant stems from a single clone, or genet)
Cultivation
The species has been propagated (by cuttings) at the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens
Efforts have also been made to culture tissue from this species in the lab
Taxonomy
Charles Denison "Deny" King discovered the plant in 1934
Winifred Curtis of the Tasmanian Herbarium named the plant in King's honour in 1967, after he sent specimens he collected at Cox's bight, Port Davey to be identified in 1965
It was thought to possibly be a hybrid between L. polymorpha and another species
Genetic analysis using microsatellite markers showed that species found close together geographically are most closely related to each other; L. tasmanica is the sister of a lineage that gave rise to the other two Tasmanian Lomatia species, L. polymorpha and L. tinctoria
Fossils
Subfossil remains identical to L. tasmanica were found in 43,600-year-old beds
The climate at that time was most likely as cool as or cooler than it is at Melaleuca today (an average yearly temperature of 11.5 °C, with the coldest month having an average minimum of 4.5 °C and the warmest month an average maximum of 20 °C), and possibly wetter (more than 2400 mm of precipitation annually)
The fossilised fragments are identical to the contemporary plant in cell structure and shape, which suggests that the ancestral and modern plant are also genetically identical
This further implies that the ancestral plant was also triploid and therefore also clonal, due to the extreme rarity of naturally occurring sexually reproducing triploid organisms
Ecology
It grows in a climate of infrequent bushfires
Fieldwork in the early 2000s established that the area had last been burnt in 1934
Most plants were around 60 years old, though some were estimated at up to 300 years old
The area in which it grows is federally protected, lying wholly within the Southwest National Park
Although all the plants are technically separate in that each has its own root system, they are collectively considered to be one of the oldest living plant clones
Each plant's lifespan is approximately 300 years, but the plant has been cloning itself for at least 43,600 years and possibly as long as 135,000 years
This estimate is based on radiocarbon dating of fossilised leaf fragments that were found 8.5 km away from the extant colony
Conservation
Lomatia tasmanica has been declared critically endangered under the Australian government's Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999
It is also classified at a state level as "Endangered" under the Tasmanian government's Threatened Species Protection Act 1995
The original plant group that King discovered in 1934 has disappeared (and likely died out), and the sole remaining group of approximately 500 plants covers a 1.2-kilometer-long area in the extreme southwest of Tasmania
This area is prone to fires and other natural threats to the plants, so Tasmania has begun an effort to develop other populations of L. tasmanica in controlled environments such as the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens
Because of its fragility and rarity, their specimens are not on display to the public
Due to its inability to reproduce sexually, there is no possibility of increasing the plant's genetic diversity to promote disease resistance through purely natural means
However, on 19 September 2009, the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens issued a media release regarding the propagation efforts saying:
"The Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens [RTBG] is working towards securing the future of a rare and ancient Tasmanian native plant... Lomatia tasmanica, commonly known as King's Lomatia, is critically endangered with less than 500 plants growing in the wild in a tiny pocket of Tasmania's isolated south west
The RTBG has been propagating the plant from cuttings since 1994... 'Fossil leaves of the plant found in the south west were dated at 43,600 years old and given that the species is a clone, it is possibly the oldest living plant in the world"
Infestation with the fungal pathogen Phytophthora cinnamomi has been recorded in other plant species around 20 m away from some wild L. tasmanica populations
Bushfire could also spread this pathogen and potentially facilitate its infection of the remaining wild plants
Cultivation
It strikes readily from cuttings but is difficult to keep alive in cultivation,often perishing when dried out
The cuttings are taken in January and February and take up to 12 months to form roots
Like their wild counterparts, the cultivated plants are susceptible to Phytophthora cinnamomi
It has been grafted successfully onto L. tinctoria, and the Botanic Gardens sought to trial grafting it onto L. ferruginea
Phytochemical profile
Lomatia tasmanica was subjected to natural products isolation methods by researchers at The University of Tasmania
Their study uncovered several unique compounds some of which are shared by other Lomatia
Long chain non-polar molecules Heptacosane and Nonacosane were found in relatively fair yield. Juglone, and Glucose Pentaacetate were also found from extractions done on the leaves of the plant
Uniquely developed Pressurized Hot Water Extraction (PHWE) utilising a household espresso machine was conducted on the leaves as well as a Diethyl-Ether maceration
Juglone and other naphthoquinone pigments have been previously isolated from Lomatia species
It is possible to speculate that the presence of a single naphthoquinone in L. tasmanica reflects the primitive and ancient position of it within the Lomatia lineage
Sources of information: