Telopea truncata
Tasmanian Waratah
Tasmanian Waratah
Wikipedia links: Angiosperms > Eudicots > Basal Eudicots > Proteales > Proteaceae > Telopea truncata
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Common name: Tasmanian Waratah
The name waratah comes from the Eora Aboriginal people, the pre-European inhabitants of the Sydney area
Conservation status: ...
Etymology:
The Greek word Telopea means see from afar
Flowers
Flowering occurs from October to January, and is related to altitude: plants at lower elevations flower earlier than ones higher up
The flower heads, known as inflorescences, are terminal—that is, they arise on the ends of small branches—and are surrounded by small inconspicuous hairy bracts
This sets T. truncata apart from all other waratah species, which have hairless bracts
In the shape of a flattened raceme, the flower heads are 3.5–6 cm in diameter and composed of 10 to 35 individual flowers
They are most commonly bright red, though scattered yellow-flowered plants occur
These were described as forma lutea but are mere colour variations and not genetically distinct
Yellow-flowered plants have both red- and yellow-flowered progeny
Anthesis is basipetal; that is, the flowers at the base (edges) of the flower head open first
The flower is composed of a 2 cm-long perianth on a 1 cm-long stalk, with a pronounced kink in the style above the ovary
All other waratah species have gently incurving styles
Anatomically, the individual flower bears a sessile anther (that is, it lacks a filament), which lies next to the stigma at the end of the style
The ovary lies at the base of the style and atop a stalk known as the gynophore, and it is from here that the seed pod then develops
Meanwhile, a crescent-shaped nectary lies at the base of the gynophore
Fruit:
After flowering, the curved leathery to woody follicles develop
Hanging downwards on wooden stalks, these are roughly oblong in shape, and measure around 5 cm long
They split longitudinally to release the winged seeds, which are ripe around March
There are around 16 seeds, which are arranged in two rows
Wooden structures known as lamellae separate the seeds from each other and the follicle walls
Leaves:
The narrow adult leaves are 3–14 cm long and 0.5–2.2 cm across and have a rough texture
Spathulate (spoon-shaped) to obovate in shape, they have smooth, slightly down-curved margins
The undersurface of the leaves is hairy
Occasional lobed leaves are seen
Stem & branches:
Unlike the NSW waratah (T. speciosissima), which has a few stems topped with flowers, the stems of the Tasmanian waratah branch freely, with numerous smaller branches topped with flower heads
Younger branches and flower heads frequently have a coating of brownish hairs.
Roots:
Habit:
A large erect shrub up to 3 m in height with several stems, although it sometimes grows as a single-stemmed tree to 10 m high
Habitat:
It grows on moist acidic soils in wet sclerophyll forest or subalpine scrub at altitudes of 600 to 1200 m
It is an understory component of subalpine forest stands of alpine ash (Eucalyptus delegatensis) and alpine yellow gum (E. subcrenulata),[27] as well as Athrotaxis selaginoides–Nothofagus gunnii short rainforest, Athrotaxis selaginoides rainforest, Leptospermum-with-rainforest scrub, the tall Nothofagus–Atherosperma rainforest and Nothofagus–Phyllocladus short rainforest
It is occasionally found in the Leptospermum scoparium–Acacia mucronata forest community of western Tasmania
Distribution:
The species is found in central, southern, and western Tasmania and is absent from warmer, dryer areas
Overview
Telopea truncata, commonly known as the Tasmanian waratah, is a plant in the family Proteaceae. It is endemic to Tasmania where it is found on moist acidic soils at altitudes of 600 to 1200 m (2000–4000 ft). Telopea truncata is a component of alpine eucalypt forest, rainforest and scrub communities. It grows as a multistemmed shrub to a height of 3 metres (10 ft), or occasionally as a small tree to 10 m (35 ft) high, with red flower heads, known as inflorescences, appearing over the Tasmanian summer (November to February) and bearing 10 to 35 individual flowers. Yellow-flowered forms are occasionally seen, but do not form a population distinct from the rest of the species.
Collected by French botanist Jacques Labillardière in 1792–93, Telopea truncata was first scientifically described in 1805. Genetic analysis revealed that the Tasmanian waratah is the most distinctive of the five waratah species. It can be cultivated in temperate climates, requiring soils with good drainage and ample moisture in part-shaded or sunny positions. Several commercially available cultivars that are hybrids of T. truncata with the New South Wales waratah (T. speciosissima) and Gippsland waratah (T. oreades) have been developed.
Taxonomy and evolution
While exploring Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania) in 1792–3, French botanist Jacques Labillardière collected specimens of what he later formally described as Embothrium truncatum in his 1805 work Novae Hollandiae Plantarum Specimen
The specific epithet is the Latin adjective truncatus, meaning "truncated" or "ending abruptly", referring to the end of the seed wing
This characteristic is not specific to the Tasmanian waratah; all members of the subtribe Embothriinae have truncate seed wings
Embothrium was a wastebasket taxon at the time, and Robert Brown proposed placing the species in a new genus, Telopea, in a talk he gave in 1809, publishing the new name Telopea truncata in 1810
Richard Salisbury had attended the talk and controversially published the species as Hylogyne australis, or southern hylogyne, in Joseph Knight's 1809 book On the cultivation of the plants belonging to the natural order of Proteeae, thus claiming precedence over Brown's formal 1810 description
Salisbury was involved in disputes with several prominent naturalists of the time, and his preemption of Brown was seen as unethical, so his names were largely ignored by his contemporaries in favor of Brown's
James Ross described a new species of waratah, Telopea tasmaniana, in his Hobart Town Almanack in 1835, but it is now considered a synonym of T. truncata.
In 1891, German botanist Otto Kuntze published Revisio generum plantarum, his response to what he perceived as a lack of method in existing nomenclatural practice
He revived the genus Hylogyne on the grounds of priority, and correctly made the new combination Hylogyne truncata for T. truncata
However, Kuntze's revisionary program was not accepted by the majority of botanists
Ultimately, the genus Telopea was nomenclaturally conserved over Hylogyne by the International Botanical Congress of 1905
Telopea truncata is one, and possibly the most distinctive, of five species from southeastern Australia which make up the genus Telopea
It is the earliest offshoot of a lineage that gives rise to the Gippsland waratah (T. oreades) and Monga waratah (T. mongaensis) of southeastern mainland Australia
The perianths of T. truncata are of a single shade of red, whereas those of its mainland relatives are coloured with two distinct shades of red—the surfaces facing the centre of the flower head are a much brighter red than those facing away
The genus is classified in the subtribe Embothriinae of the Proteaceae, along with the tree waratahs (Alloxylon) from eastern Australia and New Caledonia, and the South American genera Oreocallis and Embothrium
Almost all of these species have red terminal flowers, and hence the subtribe's origin and floral appearance most likely pre-dated the splitting of Gondwana into Australia, Antarctica, and South America over 60 million years ago
Propylipollis ambiguus (formerly Triporopollenites ambiguus) is the oldest identifiable member of the Embothriinae
It is known only from pollen deposits, and was originally described from Eocene deposits in Victoria
The fossil pollen closely resembles that of T. truncata, Alloxylon pinnatum and Oreocallis grandiflora
Fossil remains of Telopea truncata have been recovered from early to middle Pleistocene strata at Regatta Point in western Tasmania
The leaves are small, and these beds housed a subalpine plant community in what is now lowland terrain
Leaves identical to (and classified as) Telopea truncata have been recovered from early Oligocene deposits around Lake Cethana near Sheffield
Ecology
The prominent position and striking colour of the flowers of T. truncata and many of its relatives within the subtribe Embothriinae in both Australia and South America strongly suggest it is adapted to pollination by birds, and has been for over 60 million years
The flower heads produce abundant nectar, which is fed upon by many bird species
The Tasmanian waratah has a swollen woody base largely under the soil known as a lignotuber, which stores energy and nutrients as a resource for rapid growth after a bushfire
Like most Proteaceae, T. truncata has fine proteoid roots that arise from larger roots
These are roots with dense clusters of short lateral rootlets that form a mat in the soil just below the leaf litter
They are particularly efficient at absorbing nutrients from nutrient-poor soils, including the phosphorus-deficient native soils of Australia
Waratah seeds are often eaten—and destroyed—by animals and do not travel far (just several metres) from the parent plants
Cultivation
The flowers of the Tasmanian waratah provide ample nectar and hence are a food source for bird visitors to the garden.
The species can be propagated by seed, though seedlings may succumb to damping off
Growing in a natural shady location delays flowering by two to four weeks, while growing in a cooler conditions (due either to latitude or altitude) can delay flowering by up to six weeks
Pruning flower heads can promote subsequent growth of leaves and branches
It grows best in a cool climate with ample water and good drainage, and has done well in cultivation in England
The Royal Horticultural Society gave it an Award of Merit in 1934 and a First Class Certificate in 1938
The relationship between light duration and intensity, temperature, vegetative growth and flower production is poorly known. Yellow forms in cultivation were originally propagated from a plant found on Mount Wellington
Sources of information: