Eucalyptus macrocarpa
Eucalyptus macrocarpa, commonly known as mottlecah, is a species of mallee that is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It has smooth bark, usually sessile, heart-shaped adult leaves arranged in opposite pairs, large red flowers and broad conical fruit.
Description
Eucalyptus macrocarpa is a mallee that typically grows to a height of, has a sprawling or spreading habit, and forms a lignotuber. It has smooth, shiny, brownish over salmon-pink bark. Its crown is composed of juvenile leaves that are sessile, arranged in opposite pairs, heart-shaped with the bases wrapped around the stem, glaucous, long and wide. The flower buds are glaucous and are arranged singly in leaf axils on a peduncle long and a pedicel up to long. Mature buds are oval, long and wide with a beaked operculum. Flowering occurs from August to January or April or June and the flowers are red, or rarely, creamy white. The fruit is a sessile, woody, broadly conical capsule long and wide with the valves protruding above the rim of the fruit.Taxonomy and naming
Eucalyptus macrocarpa was first formally described in 1842 by William Jackson Hooker from a specimen collected by James Drummond from the "guangan". The description was published in Hooker's book, Icones Plantarum. In Curtis's Botanical Magazine, Hooker noted "he colour of the flowers is due to the stamens alone; for petals there are none, and the calyx falls off like the lid of a box". He also noted that "the bright red flowers nestled among the leaves, for a very striking object", and that indigenous people called it "morral".The specific epithet is derived from the ancient Greek words makros meaning "long" and karpos meaning "fruit". Noongar peoples know the tree as mottlecar.
In 1993, Ian Brooker and Stephen Hopper described two subspecies and the names have been accepted by the Australian Plant Census:Eucalyptus macrocarpa subsp. elachantha Brooker & Hopper has smaller leaves, buds and fruit than subspecies macrocarpa;Eucalyptus macrocarpa Hook. subsp. macrocarpa. The name elachantha is derived from the ancient Greek words elachys meaning "small" and anthos meaning "flower".