Eucalyptus sideroxylon
Eucalyptus sideroxylon, commonly known as mugga ironbark, or red ironbark is a small to medium-sized tree that is endemic to eastern Australia. It has dark, deeply furrowed ironbark, lance-shaped adult leaves, flower buds in groups of seven, white, red, pink or creamy yellow flowers and cup-shaped to shortened spherical fruit.
Description
Eucalyptus sideroxylon is a tree that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. The bark is dark grey to black, deeply furrowed ironbark on the trunk and larger branches, smooth white to grey on the thinnest branches. Young plants and coppice regrowth have lance-shaped to oblong or linear leaves that are long and wide. Adult leaves are lance-shaped, the same shade of green on both sides, long and wide tapering to a petiole long. The flower buds are arranged in leaf axils on an unbranched peduncle long, the individual buds on pedicels long. Mature buds are oval or diamond-shaped, long and wide with a conical to beaked operculum. Flowering occurs from April to December and the flowers are white, red, pink or creamy yellow. The fruit is a woody cup-shaped to shortened spherical capsule long and wide with the valves below the level of the rim.Taxonomy and naming
recorded the name Eucalyptus sideroxylon in Thomas Mitchell's 1848 Journal of an Expedition into the Interior of Tropical Australia but did not provide a description of the plant. The first formal description of the species was published in 1887 by William Woolls in Linnean Society of [New South Wales|Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales]. The specific epithet is derived from the ancient Greek words sidēros, meaning "iron" and xylon, meaning "wood".Two subspecies of E. sideroxylon are accepted by the Australian Plant Census as at December 2019:
- Eucalyptus sideroxylon subsp. improcera A.R.Bean is a small, stunted tree and has shorter, wider leaves than the autonym and longer flower buds;
- Eucalyptus sideroxylon A.Cunn. ex Woolls subsp. sideroxylon.
Distribution and habitat
Mugga ironbark is widespread and often abundant in woodland from south-eastern Queensland through New South Wales to Victoria. Subspecies improcera is only known from the Barakula State Forest north-northwest of Chinchilla.Uses
The leaves are used in the production of cineole based eucalyptus oil.Apiarists in New South Wales place hives in red-ironbark woodlands to collect the honey.