Angophora Costata
. . .
. . .
Wikipedia links: Angiosperms > Eudicots > Rosids > Myrtaceae > Angophora costata
Other links:
Common name: Sydney Red Gum
Also Rusty gum, smooth-barked apple or smooth-barked angophora
Aboriginal people from the Sydney region knew the tree as kajimbourra
Conservation status: unknown
Etymology:
The specific epithet, costata, is a Latin word meaning "ribbed"
Flowers:
The flower buds are arranged on the ends of branchlets on a branched peduncle 3–25 mm long, each branch of the peduncle with usually three buds on pedicels 3–15 mm long
Mature buds are oval to globe-shaped, up to 10 mm long and 11 mm wide
There are five sepals up to 3 mm long and the petals are white to creamy white with a green keel, 3–5 mm long and 3–6 mm wide
Flowering occurs from October to December
Fruit:
The fruit is a oval or bell-shaped capsule up to 20 mm long and wide
New seedlings have petiolate round cotyledon leaves 1.5 cm wide and long
Leaves:
It has smooth pinkish or orange-brown bark that weathers to grey and is shed in small scales
Young plants and coppice regrowth have sessile, elliptical to egg-shaped leaves arranged in opposite pairs with a stem-clasping base, 60–125 mm long and 20–65 mm wide
Adult leaves are arranged in opposite pairs, glossy green but paler on the lower surface, lance-shaped or curved, 70–190 mm long and 12–35 mm wide
Petiole 9–25 mm long
New leaf growth is strongly tinted with red
Reaching 30 m in height, the species has distinctive smooth bark that is pinkish or orange-brown when new and fades to grey with age
Its lance-shaped leaves are arranged in opposite pairs along the stems, with white or creamy white flowers appearing from October to December
The flower buds are usually arranged in groups of three, followed by ribbed, oval or bell-shaped fruit
Stem & branches:
x
Roots:
x
Habit:
Angophora costata is a tree that typically grows to a height of 30 m and forms a lignotuber
Habitat:
Angophora costata grows in sandy soil, often over sandstone
It grows in open forest and woodland
It is in association with such species as:
Sydney peppermint (Eucalyptus piperita),
bangalay (E. botryoides),
grey gum (E. punctata),
blue-leaved stringybark (E. agglomerata),
white mahogany (E. acmenoides),
broad-leaved white mahogany (E. umbra),
large-fruited red mahogany (E. scias),
red bloodwood (Corymbia gummifera),
yellow bloodwood (C. eximia),
pink bloodwood (C. intermedia)
lemon-scented gum (C. citriodora),
turpentine (Syncarpia glomulifera), f
orest oak (Allocasuarina torulosa), and
cypress pines (Callitris species),
In hind dune communities with:
wedding bush (Monotoca elliptica
burrawang (Macrozamia communis)
Distribution:
Endemic to eastern Australia
Occurs naturally in Queensland and NSW
It is widely distributed in south-eastern Queensland and disjunctly in the White Mountains National Park
In NSW it mainly occurs in coastal areas south from Coffs Harbour to Narooma and as far west as the Blue Mountains
New seedlings have petiolate round cotyledon leaves 15 mm wide and long
It is found from sea level to an altitude of 300 min areas of predominantly summer rainfall receiving 600 to 1 200 mm a year
Maximum temperatures across its range vary from 25 to 35 °C and minimum temperatures from 0 to 8 °C, with anywhere from 0 to 50 days of frost
In Victoria it is a commonly planted ornamental and is naturalised in some places
Additional notes:
Taxonomy
Sydney red gum was first formally described in 1788 by German botanist Joseph Gaertner and given the name Metrosideros costata in his book De Fructibus et Seminibus Plantarum, from material collected by surveyor David Burton around Port Jackson
English botanist Richard Anthony Salisbury named it Metrisoderos apocynifolia in his 1796 work Prodromus stirpium in horto ad Chapel Allerton vigentium
Spanish taxonomist Antonio José Cavanilles erected the new genus Angophora in 1797 in his book Icones et Descriptiones Plantarum, giving the species the name Angophora lanceolata
English botanist George Bentham used this last name in his Flora Australiensis in 1867
English botanist James Britten changed the name to Angophora costata in the Journal of Botany, British and Foreign in 1916
In 1986, Gregory John Leach described three subspecies in the journal Telopea and two names have been accepted by the Australian Plant Census:
Angophora costata (Gaertn.) Britten subsp. costata has a glabrous floral cup and fruit mostly less than 15 mm wide;
Angophora costata subsp. euryphylla L.A.S.Johnson ex G.J.Leach has a hairy floral cup and fruit more than 15 mm wide
It is found only in a small area including Putty, Howes Valley and Judge Dowling Range in central NSW
Genetic analysis published in 2021 showed it not to be distinct from subsp. costata
A third subspecies, subsp. leiocarpa was reclassified as a separate species Angophora leiocarpa
A phylogenetic analysis of the genus published in 2021 confirmed its genetic distinctness from the two costata subspecies
Recent genetic work has been published showing Angophora to be more closely related to Eucalyptus than Corymbia, and the name Eucalyptus apocynifolia has been proposed for this species if it were to be placed in the genus Eucalyptus
This has not been taken up by the botanical community
Ecology
Angophora costata trees can live over 100 years
The species responds to bushfire by resprouting from epicormic buds and its lignotuber; shoots on branches of older specimens arise a month, while shoots resprout from the trunk and base young plants within a month of a hot fire
Seedlings appear within 9 to 10 months
The tree is parasitised by the long-flowered mistletoe (Dendrophthoe vitellina)
The flowers are eaten by the grey-headed flying fox (Pteropus poliocephalus) and little red flying fox (P. scapulatus), while the seed is eaten by the crimson rosella (Platycercus elegans).
Although the bark of A. costata is smooth, many invertebrates are found there
Several spiders in the family Salticidae, including Servaea vestita, and pseudoscorpions live under loose bark
The flattened bug Stenocotis depressa evades detection by camouflage,
and cockroaches and huntsman spiders live under the loose bark at the base of the trunk
Angophora costata is also susceptible to the fungal pathogens Quambalaria pitotheka, Aulographina eucalypti and Cryptococcus neoformans.
Uses
Use in horticulture
Smooth-barked apple grows well in a variety of situations and can be easily grown from seed in a loose, well-drained seed-raising mixture
Some specimens have straight trunk but others have a more branching habit with twisted trunks
The tree sometimes sheds branches and should not be planted close to buildings
Timber
The heartwood is hard though not durable
Pale pink-brown in colour, it has a density of 755-1045 kg/m3 and a coarse texture
It is not suitable for use on the ground, though has been used for fencing and rough flooring
The pale sapwood has a width of up to 5 cm and is susceptible to attack by borers of the genus Lyctus
Honey
This tree produces abundant pollen but little nectar. and the honey produced is not highly regarded
Significant individuals
Angophora Reserve in the Sydney suburb of Avalon was named after a huge individual, reportedly around 300 years of age
That tree died in the late 20th century
Also in Sydney, the upper Lane Cove River Valley has several large Sydney red gums, one near Conscript Pass was measured at 45 m tall
The largest known living tree in New Zealand (241 cm diameter) is located at Hobsonville near Auckland