Acacia colletioides


Acacia colletioides, commonly known as wait-a-while, pin bush or spinebush, is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to southern continental Australia. It is a rigid shrub or tree with sessile, straight to more or less curved and terete phyllodes, more or less spherical heads of bright yellow flowers, and linear, thinly leathery pods.

Description

Acacia colletioides is a shrub or tree that typically grows to a height of and has mostly glabrous branchlets with scars where phyllodes have fallen. The phyllodes are sessile and inserted on distinct, yellow stem-projections. The phyllodes are straight to more or less curved, more or less terete, usually long and wide tapered and sharply pointed. The flowers are borne in two, more or less spherical or widely elliptic heads long and in diameter in axils on peduncles long. Each head has 12 to 24 bright yellow flowers. Flowering occurs from July to November and the pods are linear, constricted between the seeds, up to long and wide, thinly leathery and glabrous. The seeds are oval to egg-shaped, black, shiny and long with an orange or yellow aril nearly surrounding the seed.

Taxonomy

Acacia colletioides was first formally described in 1842 by the botanist George Bentham in Hooker's London Journal of Botany from specimens collected by Allan Cunnigham on the "Harrington Plains" in the "interior of New South Wales". The specific epithet is named for the resemblance of the spiny, rigid foliage, appearing like that of some species in the genus Colletia.
This species is closely related to Acacia nyssophylla, and is similar in appearance to A. asepala, A. subsessilis and A. enterocarpa.

Distribution

Wait-a-while is found in dry areas from around Geraldton on the west coast of Western Australia, through part of South Australia and north western Victoria to the western slopes and plains, south and west of the Byrock-Nyngan area in New South Wales, where it grows in mallee shrubland or open woodland.
In Western Australia it occurs in the Avon Wheatbelt, Coolgardie, Gascoyne, Geraldton Sandplains, Gibson Desert, Great Victoria Desert, Murchison, Nullarbor and Yalgoo bioregions where it grows in a variety of soil types.
In Victoria it is found in the Murray mallee, the Lowan mallee, the Murray scroll belt and the Robinvale Plains bioregions where it is found in the north-west mostly as a part of mallee scrub or open woodland communities growing in sandy loam soils.