Atherosperma moschatum
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Wikipedia links: Angiosperms > Basal Angiosperms > Magnoliids > Laurales > Atherospermataceae > Atherosperma > moschatum
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Common name: Southern sassafras
Common names include "southern sassafras - narrow leaf form" and "blackheart sassafras"
Conservation status: unknown
Etymology:
x
Flowers:
Flowers form in winter, facing down to avoid rain and snow
Petals are white, and yellow and maroon in the centre
Fruit:
The fruit capsules mature and open around January, releasing feathery wind-blown seeds
Germination is unreliable
However, abundant new seedlings may unexpectedly form
Seedlings are unlikely to survive at lower altitudesx
Leaves:
Its leaves are narrower than the more southern form of A. m. subsp. moschatum, and many of the leaves are entire, though some small prickles grow on a minority of leaves. Leaves are opposite on the stem, 8 cm long, 1 cm wide, white underneath, glossy above, and veiny.
They are pleasantly scented when crushed
Stem & branches:
The trunk is not buttressed and somewhat cylindrical
The bark is fairly smooth with bumps and lenticels, often also marked with moss and lichen
Young shoots and new growth are noticeably hairy
Roots:
x
Habit:
A shrub or a small tree, growing from 1 to 30 m tall
It is a scented and beautiful tree, especially when in flower
Habitat:
Its habitat is cool, moist, protected areas, ranging from 650 to 1540 m above sea level, near streams
Almost always it is seen growing with the black olive berry
Often found on the richer volcanic soils, it also grows in sandstone slot canyons where it may be in a dwarf form
An uncommon or rare plant
it may be seen at the Mount Tomah Botanic Garden west of Sydney, or on the Neates Glen walk at Blackheath
Distribution:
It is found in four areas: Monga National Park, Blue Mountains, Barrington Tops, and at Mount Grundy west of Port Macquarie, by streams such as the Tia River
It may also be undiscovered in the Illawarra to the south, and New England National Park to the north
The original specimen was collected in the Blue Mountains
Species:
World: S, G
Australia: S, G
Additional notes:
Historical uses
The 1889 book 'The Useful Native Plants of Australia records that "The fragrant bark of this tree has been used as tea in Tasmania. A decoction or infusion of the green or dried bark was made, and according to Mr. Gunn,
it has a pleasant taste when taken with plenty of milk. Its effect is, however, slightly aperient. It is also used in the form of a beer. The bark contains an agreeable bitter, of much repute as a tonic amongst sawyers
It is called Native Sassafras from the odour of its bark, due to an essential oil closely resembling true sassafras in odour
Bosisto likens the smell of the inner bark to new ale, and says that a decoction from this part of the tree is a good substitute for yeast in raising bread. It is diaphoretic and diuretic in asthma and other pulmonary affections, but it is known more especially for its sedative action on the heart, and it has been successfully used in some forms of heart disease
It is prepared of the strength of 4 ounces of the bark to 20 ounces of rectified spirit, and is given in doses of 30 to 60 drops, usually on a lump of sugar
The volatile oil of the bark alone is said to have a lowering action on the heart
See "Volatile and Essential Oils." The bark has been examined by N. Zeyer, who has found in it volatile oil, fixed oil, wax, albumin, gum, sugar, starch, butyric acid, an aromatic resin, iron-greening tannic acid, and an alkaloid which he designates atherospermine. ."
Genetic study
Genetic studies of the subspecies, along with the more widespread southerly distributed subspecies, Atherosperma moschatum subsp. moschatum, have shown that populations of the subspecies A. m. integrifolium are the most strongly diverged of all populations within the range of the species at both isozymes and chloroplast DNA
These results are consistent with long-term isolation of these populations through at least the last glacial period.