Acacia littorea
Acacia littorea, also known as the shark tooth wattle, is a shrub belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Phyllodineae.
Description
The dense pungent shrub typically grows to a height of and produces yellow flowers from August to November. It has glabrous but prominently ribbed branchlets. The green, pungent and somewhat crowded phyllodes are ascending on the branchlets. They have an interesting obtriangular to obdeltate shape resembling a sharks tooth. The phyllodes are long and and sometimes larger. The simple inflorescences have globular heads containing 8 to 15 pale-yellow flowers. After flowering blackish to yellowish linear to curved seed pods that are around in length with a width of. The pods contain shiny brown oblong seeds arranged longitudinally which are long.Taxonomy
The species was first formally described by the botanist Bruce Maslin in 1978 as part of the work Studies in the genus Acacia – 8 A revision of the Uninerves – Triangulares, in part published in the journal Nuytsia.The type specimen was collected by Bruce Maslin along the shoreline of Princess Royal Harbour near Albany in 1975.
Several synonyms exist: Acacia dolabriformis, Acacia trapezoides, Acacia cuneata var. glabra, Acacia decipiens var. triangularis, Mimosa decipiens and Acacia praemorsa.
The species is closely related to Acacia truncata.