Macrozamia spiralis
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Wikipedia links: Gymnosperms > Cycadales > Zamiaceae > Macrozamia spiralis
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Common name: . . .
Conservation status: Endangered
Conservation areas that it is protected in include Werakata National Park, Windsor Downs Nature Reserve, Agnes Banks Nature Reserve, and Castlereagh Nature Reserve, where it is common
Macrozamia spiralis was rated as endangered in 2003
Etymology:
Macrozamia …. from Greek, macros, large, referring to the related genus Zamia
Cones and seed:
A male plant develops 1 to 4 male (or pollen-bearing) cones, which are fusiform (spindle-shaped), and measure 15–20 cm high by 5–6 cm wide
The female plant produces a single oval female (seed) cone, which is 12–20 cm high and 6–9 cm wide
The orange to red fleshy seeds have been reported to be ripe in April and May
Plants do not reproduce until 10 to 20 years of age and are thought to live over 60 years
They regrow from the ground after bushfire
Leaves:
They have 2–12 leaves that range up to 100 cm in length
Plants have 2–12 leaves that range from 35 to 100 cm in length
Each compound frond has 45–120 simple pinnae that are 12–20 cm long at the leaf's greatest width
Each pinna is 0.5–1 cm wide
The rachis of the leaf is often twisted 180 degrees, sometimes up to 360 degrees, though sometimes not at all
Stem & branches:
Plants generally lack a trunk
This cycad is acaulescent; the 8–20 cm diameter stem does not generally grow above ground level
Roots:
Seedlings of Macrozamia spiralis have a tuber and coralloid roots that rise up above the ground containing cyanobacteria
These exist in a symbiotic relationship with their cycad host by nitrogen fixation
Field work done on roots of 74 cycads from diverse genera in 2010 showed that the relationship between cycad and cyanobacterium species is not exclusive; the most common genera of cyanobacteria isolated from cycads were those of Nostoc (which was isolated from M. spiralis) and Calothrix
Habit:
Habitat:
It is found in sclerophyll forest on low-nutrient soils
Scattered plants grow on clay, sandy or gravelly low-nutrient soils in sclerophyll forest
Under trees such as narrow-leaved apple (Angophora bakeri) and broad-leaved red ironbark (Eucalyptus fibrosa)
Distribution:
It is endemic to New South Wales in eastern Australia
It is found in central NSW, from Dunedoo and the Goulburn River valley eastwards over the Blue Mountains and into the Sydney Basin south to Waterfall, and Wallacia, and north to Maroota and Putty
Additional notes:
Taxonomy
Richard Anthony Salisbury described this species as Zamia spiralis in 1796, from a collection made somewhere in the vicinity of Port Jackson (Sydney); however, no type specimen is extant
Dutch botanist Friedrich Anton Wilhelm Miquel gave it its current name in 1842
Meanwhile, Joseph Dalton Hooker described M. corallipes from a plate in 1872
For many years, the name M. spiralis was applied to the large common cycad from the Sydney region, while its smaller relative was known as M. corallipes
In 1959, New South Wales Herbarium botanist Lawrie Johnson examined the species descriptions and determined that Salisbury's original description was in fact of the smaller species, and renamed the familiar burrawang as Macrozamia communis
Cultivation
Macrozamia spiralis is suitable for growing in pots or in the ground
It requires good drainage and benefits from extra water in dry periods
It can be grown under established trees
It can be propagated by seed, though germination takes 12 to 18 months
Uses
The plant has been used to produce alcohol, adhesive pastes, and laundry starch.
Sources of information: