Brachychiton rupestris
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Common name: Narrow-leaved Bottle Tree
Also Queensland bottle tree and narrow-leaved bottle tree
Conservation status:
Least concern in Queensland
It is an emergent tree species in an endangered ecosystem known as "semi-evergreen vine thickets
Although the species status under Queensland's Nature Conservation Act is "least concern", it is an emergent tree species in an endangered ecosystem known as "semi-evergreen vine thickets of the Brigalow Belt (North and South) and Nandewar bioregions", listed under the Commonwealth EPBC Act, and is declining across its range
Furthermore, the health of trees in cleared areas may be compromised
The species is conserved within its natural habitat in a number of National Parks including Auburn River, Benarkin, Bunya Mountains, Coalstoun Lakes, Dipperu, Good Night Scrub, Humboldt, Isla Gorge and Tregole
Etymology:
The name of the genus is derived from the Greek brachys, short, and chiton, tunic, a reference to the loose seed coats
Brachychiton was for many years misconstrued as being of neuter gender—first by the genus describers Heinrich Wilhelm Schott and Stephan Endlicher and later by von Mueller and others—with the specific names then incorrectly amended
Thus the bottle tree's binomial was recorded as Brachychiton rupestre, now regarded as an orthographical variant
Flowers:
Cream-coloured flowers appear from September to November
Panicles of creamy-yellow flowers with red markings appear from September to November in the species' native range
These arise from axillary buds on end branches
Each panicle contains 10–30 flowers and is 3–8 cm long, and each flower is 0.5–1 cm long and 1.3–1.8 cmwide
The length of th e lobes of the perianth is more than half the perianth diameter
Like all Brachychiton species, it is monoecious—each plant has distinct male and female flowers
Male flowers have 15 stamens, with pale yellow anthers, while female flowers have cream or white stigmas surrounded by rudimentary stellate (star-shaped) carpels, which sit atop the ovaries
Fruit:
Woody boat-shaped follicles that ripen from November to May
Groups of 3 to 5 woody boat-shaped follicles, each containing 4 to 8 (or occasionally up to 12) seeds, develop from November to May
The follicles, smooth on the outer surface and hairy inside, split along their length to reveal seeds
The seeds, which are ovoid with a smooth surface, and 6–7 mm long by 3.5–4.5 mm wide, are covered by a hairy coating known as the exotesta
Leaves:
It is deciduous, losing its leaves between September and December
The leaves are simple or divided, with one or more narrow leaf blades up to 11 cm long and 2 cm wide
Like those of all members of the genus, the leaves are alternately arranged along the stems
It is deciduous
Trees in their native habitat are typically leafless between September and December; the timing, duration and extent of leaf drop may be affected by extremes of rainfall or drought
Sometimes trees shed leaves from only some branches.
On every tree, the leaves vary in shape, ranging from narrow and elliptic to deeply divided
The upper surface is glossy, contrasting with a pale undersurface
The adult leaf blades are 4–11 cm long and 0.8–2 cm wide with pointed (acuminate or apiculate) tips
They have a raised midrib on the upper and lower surface, with 12–25 pairs of lateral veins that are more prominent on the upper surface, arising at 50–60 degrees from the midrib
The compound juvenile leaves have 3–9 spear-shaped (lanceolate) or linear lobes
These each measure 4–14 cm long and 0.3–1 cm wide
Stem & branches:
It has a bulbous trunk, which can be up to 3.5 m diameter at breast height (DBH)
Reaches 10–25 m high
The thick trunk is 5–15 m tall, with a 1–3.5 m diameter at breast height (DBH)
It has dark grey bark and is marked by shallow tessellation and deeper fissures
Smaller branches are light green or grey, as are the trunks of immature trees
Roots:
x
Habit:
It grows as a succulent tree reaching 10–20 m (rarely 25 m) in height
Plants in cultivation are usually shorter
Habitat:
It is a key component and emergent tree in the endangered central semi-evergreen vine thickets—also known as bottletree scrub—of the Queensland Brigalow Belt
It is an emergent tree in forests dominated by brigalow (Acacia harpophylla), hoop pine (Araucaria cunninghamii), or ooline (Cadellia pentastylis)
It is always present in the Central semi-evergreen vine thicket—also known as Bottletree Scrub—of the Brigalow Belt
Other common species include broad-leaved bottle tree (Brachychiton australis) and belah (Casuarina cristata)
The bottle tree is replaced by the kurrajong in similar communities in NSW
It grows on the tops and slopes of hills or ridges in low hilly country, in clay, shale, or basalt soils
Distribution:
Native to Queensland
It is found in central Queensland from latitude 22° S to 28° S, with the western limits of its range defined by the 500 mm rainfall isohyet
Additional notes:
Discovered and described by Sir Thomas Mitchell and John Lindley in 1848
No subspecies are recognised.
Cultivation
As a drought deciduous succulent tree, it adapts readily to cultivation and is tolerant of a range of soils and temperatures
Remnant trees are often left by farmers on cleared land for their value as shade and fodder trees.
Largest bottle tree in Roma, Queensland, where the species is used extensively for street plantings
Plants in cultivation are usually shorter than in their native range
Close relative
The closely related Proserpine bottle tree (Brachychiton compactus) that occurs only in the vicinity of the town of Proserpine can be distinguished by its more oval leaves, more compact flower heads, and longer ellipsoid follicles
The undescribed Ormeau bottle tree has brighter lime-green new foliage and leaves but is otherwise similar to the Proserpine bottle tree
Taxonomy and naming
The species came to the attention of the scientific community when explorer Sir Thomas Mitchell observed the trees on his expedition through Queensland in 1848 and published an account in Journal of an Expedition into the Interior of Tropical Australia in the same year. He came across them as he ascended Mount Abundance near present-day Roma, remarking that "The trunk bulged out in the middle like a barrel, to nearly twice the diameter at the ground, or of that at the first springing of the branches above. These were small in proportion to their great girth, and the whole tree looked very odd In the same publication, English botanist John Lindley provided the first formal description.Lindley placed it in the genus Delabechea as the sole representative—Delabechea rupestris. The genus name was selected by Mitchell to honor the director of the British Geological Survey, Henry De la Beche, while the Latin specific epithet rupestris (meaning living among rocks) alludes to the rocky hilltop habitat of specimens observed by Mitchell. Ferdinand von Mueller, the Government Botanist in Victoria, renamed it Brachychiton delabechei in 1862, incorporating the genus Delabechea into Brachychiton.
In his landmark Flora Australiensis, English botanist George Bentham published the first key for the nine described species of Brachychiton, and relegated them to a section of Sterculia. Hence the Queensland bottle tree became Sterculia rupestris. Von Mueller maintained his recognition of Brachychiton as a separate genus. German botanist Otto Kuntze challenged the generic name Sterculia in 1891, on the grounds that the name Clompanus took precedence. He republished the Queensland bottle tree as Clompanus rupestris. German botanist Karl Moritz Schumann gave it its current binomial name in 1893, which was accepted by Achille Terraciano of the Orto botanico di Palermo and subsequent authorities, and remains current.
In 1988, Gordon Guymer of the Queensland Herbarium published a taxonomic revision of Brachychiton; he classified B. rupestris in the section Delabechea along with the related and newly described Proserpine bottle tree. A third species, from southeast Queensland, has been recognised but not yet described. Unique to the section, all three species have bulbous trunks and can have large cavities in the vertical wood parenchyma. The genus Brachychiton lies within an Australasian clade within the subfamily Sterculioideae (previously family Sterculiaceae) in a large broadly defined Malvaceae. It is only distantly related to Sterculia, belonging to a different clade within the Sterculioideae
Hybrid
Brachychiton × turgidulus is a naturally occurring hybrid cross of B. rupestris with the kurrajong B. populneus subsp. populneus
It is particularly prevalent east of Boonah
Ecology
Brachychiton rupestris has been recorded as a host plant for the mistletoe species Dendrophthoe glabrescens
Insects hosted by the species include the pale cotton stainer bug, a pest of cotton crops, and the kurrajong leaf roller caterpillar that chews on the foliage and rolls individual leaves, within which it then pupates
Bottle tree scrub is a key habitat of the near threatened black-breasted buttonquail
Brachychiton rupestris can withstand bushfires and responds by flowering and putting forth new foliage afterwards
Uses
Aboriginal people made use of the trees through eating the roots of young plants and by consuming secretions from the trunk that were induced by wounds
Fibre obtained from the species was used to make nets
The leaves have also been used for fodder, and Queensland farmers often leave bottle trees as a potential food source when land is cleared
During drought conditions, whole trees have been felled to feed stock
The soft edible pulp inside the trunk is exposed by removing the bark
The pulp is energy-rich but protein-poor, and occasional cases of nitrate poisoning have led to cattle deaths
Cultivation
Bottle trees are commonly found planted in streets and parks, on farms, and as features in gardens. An avenue in Roma, Queensland, was planted between 1918 and 1920, each tree representing one of 93 local men killed in World War I. The species has been cultivated as an indoor plant and a bonsai subject.
Bottle trees grow best in well-drained, slightly acidic soil, in full sunshine. They are suited to cultivation in regional climates equivalent to USDA hardiness zones 9 to 12. In the first stages of growth, the bottle tree is very slow-growing, and the formation of the unique bottle shape is not visible until the tree is about 5 to 8 years old. Mature trees transplant easily, and can withstand intervals of up to three months between digging and replanting without detriment. Bottle trees grown from seed may take up to 20 years to flower. Flowering takes place after adult leaves have appeared.
Plants are readily propagated from seed. As seed is surrounded by irritating hairs within the pod, extraction requires care. Stem cuttings of semi-mature growth can be taken in late summer and require the application of rooting hormones and bottom heat.