Lecture 6- Myrtaceae and Eucalypts Flashcards
How many species are the in the family Myrtaceae?
-3000 spp. worldwide -1650 in Australia -large family, includes eucalypts -the number is number of genera, largely southern hemisphere Gondwanan group -the spread from there to northern hemisphere (limited)
What are Myrtaceae and what are they used for?
• In Australia: bottlebrushes, tea trees, paperbarks, lilly pillies; eucalypts dominate forests and woodlands • Used traditionally for wood for canoes, bark, honey, water (mallee roots) • Modern uses- horticulture, timber, paper, oils, spices - cloves (Syzygium aromaticum flower buds) • Fruit - scrub cherries, Guava, Feijoa!
What are the characteristics of family Myrtaceae?
• All have leaves with aromatic oils in oil glands • Anti-herbivory; increases flammability -the yellow dots are glands full of oil -basically cavities in a leaf lined with cells that secrete the oil
What are the fruits of Myrtaceae like?
- Dry-fruited forms e.g. eucalypt capsule opens by valves (splitting of top of ovary), protected from fire 2.Fleshy-fruited forms e.g. rainforest lilly pilly -flowers are mostly stamens= the ornamental part that attracts pollinators -some species have fleshy fruit (only few) -the fleshy good tasting fruit occur in the rainforest
What are the flowers of Myrtaceae like?
- Flower regular in shape, 4-5 sepals, 4-5 petals
- Many stamens
- Inferior ovary,the ovary is on the bottom
What are the flowers of Myrtaceae like when folded?
- oil glands present in the reproductive parts too= anti herbivory function, can be fragrant and part of attraction to pollinating organisms
- can have different composition of the oil in different parts of the same plant
- top of the ovary= tissue that produces nectar= collects and attracts pollinators
What colour are tea tree flowers and what pollinates them?
•White, open flowers • Pollinated by flies, beetles, bees
What are bottlebrushes pollinated by?
-red coloured flowers, red stamens so pollinated by birds or by honey possum
How many species of eucalypts are there in Australia?
-700+ -forest, woodlands, and mallee shrublands
Where do eucalypts occur?
-All habitats except rainforest, alpine and arid desert
What are eucalypts used for?
-extremelly important ecologically •Timber - building, furniture E. marginata (jarrah) WA E. regnans (mountain ash) EA •Pulp for paper •Fuel •Oils •Ornamentals •Reforestation of degraded land e.g. red gums, blue gums in salted areas •Habitats for animals e.g. hollows in tree trunks for possums
What are the characteristics of the Mountain Ash? (eucalypts)
-The tallest flowering plant in the world - 100+ m height, 400 years old, nest hollows a resource for animals -After fire, regenerates from seed stored in canopy in woody fruits! adult plants killed by the fire -then regenerate from seeds and grow very quickly -means that all the trees in the same area will be approximately the same age as they date to the same fire disturbance
What are the genetics of Eucalypts?
-DNA data show two major lines of evolution, three genera Eucalyptus named in 1789 Collected on Cook’s 1st voyage Corymbia, bloodwoods named in 1995
What is the fossil record of Eucalypts?
-Flowers & Fruits 30 mya -Pollen 60 mya -history- prevalent in australia now, have a patchy fossil record, maybe due to where they grew -have been in Australia for a long time, at least 30 MY maybe 60 MY -don’t occur in S. America at present but probably did prior to the breakup of Gondwana
What are the eucalypts’ rainforest relatives and what do they tell us about eucalypts?
-3 related rainforest genera to the eucalypts -morphology that is ancestral to eucalypts so can tell us how they evolved