Melaleuca nervosa
Melaleuca nervosa, commonly known as fibrebark, is a shrub or tree in the myrtle family Myrtaceae and is endemic to northern Australia. It is a narrow-leaved, tropical paperbark with yellow-green and red-flowering forms. As with some other melaleucas, this species has many uses to Indigenous Australians.
Description
Melaleuca nervosa grows to tall, has erect branches and papery-fibrous bark which may be grey, cream, brown or white. There is variation in the leaf size and shape depending on the subspecies but they are generally long, wide, leathery, covered with fine or curly, silky hairs when young and have 3–7 longitudinal veins.The flowers are arranged in 6 to 20 groups of three in long spikes about long and diameter. The stamens are arranged in five bundles around the flower and in this species there are 3–7 stamens per bundle. The flowers are white, creamy-green, cream, yellow-green or occasionally red. Flowers appear from April to September and are followed by fruit which are woody, cup-shaped capsules about long and wide.
Taxonomy and naming
Fibrebark was first formally described in 1848 by John Lindley and given the name Callistemon nervosum. The description was published in Thomas L. Mitchell's Journal of an expedition to the interior of tropical Australia. The type specimen was collected by Thomas Mitchell "at Mitchell's Camp of 16th July, 1846, which is quite close to Mantua Downs on the Claude and Nogoa Rivers, south of Springsure, north Queensland." He described it as "a magnificent new crimson Callistemon, with its young flowers and leaves wrapped in wool". In 1944, Edwin Cheel changed the name to Melaleuca nervosa, the change published in Journal and Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales. The specific epithet is a Latin word meaning "sinewy", referring to the distinctive leaf veins of this species.Callistemon nervosus is regarded as a synonym of Melaleuca nervosa by the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.