Acacia calamifolia
Acacia calamifolia, commonly known as wallowa, reed-leaf wattle or other common names, is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to south-eastern continental Australia. It is an erect or spreading shrub with narrowly linear, terete or flat phyllodes, spherical heads of pale yellow to golden yellow flowers, and straight to curved or twisted, leathery pods.
Description
Acacia calamifolia is an erect or spreading shrub that typically grows to a height of and usually, The phyllodes are narrowly linear, round or flat in cross section, mostly long and wide with a delicate, curved point on the end.The flowers are borne in 2 to 8 spherical or oblong heads in racemes long on peduncle long, each head with about 28 to 46 pale yellow to golden yellow flowers. Flowering occurs in October and November and the pods are more or less woody to crust-like, appearing somewhat like a string of beads, usually long and wide containing dark brown to black oblong seeds, long with a club-shaped aril.
Taxonomy
Acacia calamifolia was first formally described in 1824 by John Lindley in Edwards's Botanical Register from an unpublished description by Robert Sweet.The specific epithet is taken from the Latin words calamus meaning 'reed' and folium meaning 'leaf', in reference to the shape of the phyllodes.
This species is sometimes also known as willow, broom wattle, sandhill wattle or reed-leaved wattle.
The name A. calamifolia is misapplied to Acacia euthycarpa in Victoria.