Acacia hammondii, also known as Hammond's wattle, is a tree or shrub belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Juliflorae that is native across northern Australia.
Description
The tree or shrub typically grows to a height of. It has smooth or fibrous and fissured bark. The angular and resinous branchlets can be glabrous or slightly haired and have with prominent lenticels. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The phyllodes have a linear or narrowly elliptic shape and are flat and straight or slightly curved. The thinly coriaceous and stiff phyllodes are in length and in width and have many stomates with two obvious main acentral nerves. It blooms from May to July producing yellow flowers. The cylindrical flower-spikes have a length of. Following flowering cultrate to narrowly oblong, glabrousseed pods form that are straight-sided and are in length and wideand have a papyraceous texture. The dark brown to black seeds have a broadly elliptic shape and are wide with a pale and almost closed areole.