Anstey-Keane Jewel. Let’s have a walk.

The last year wildflower walk at Anstey-Keane reserve attracted ~25 wildflower enthusiasts. We plan to keep on promoting that beautiful bushland – the second most diverse natural jewel on Swan Coastal Plain. You can learn about the details on our Anstey-Keane 2016 Facebook page or just here. Please share the link with your friends.

David from Friends of Forrestdale Lake and Neil from Murdoch Branch will join us again to share their vast knowledge on diverse flora and fauna of the reserve.

We have compiled a list of wildflowers we saw last year and it is very likely that they will greet us again this year:

Hypocalymma robustum
Hypocalymma robustum

Continue reading “Anstey-Keane Jewel. Let’s have a walk.”

Eucalyptus rhodantha

Eucalyptus rhodantha Blakely & H.Steedman var. rhodantha

Conservation Code: Threatened Flora (Declared Rare Flora — Extant)
Naturalised Status: Native to Western Australia
Name Status: Current

Brief Description
Grazyna Paczkowska, Tuesday 28 November 1995
Spreading mallee, 1.5-4 m high, bark smooth. Fl. red/cream-white, Jul or Sep to Dec or Jan. Grey/yellow/red sand over laterite. Undulating country, hillslopes.

Distribution
Beard’s Provinces: South-West Province.

IBRA Regions: Avon Wheatbelt, Geraldton Sandplains.

IBRA Subregions: Avon Wheatbelt P1, Avon Wheatbelt P2, Lesueur Sandplain.

Local Government Areas (LGAs): Carnamah, Coorow, Moora, Three Springs.

e rhodantha map

(Florabase)

Chin Up Clean Up :) A Truly Australian Day

The Wildflower Society of Western Australia Inc. (WSWA) was established in 1958 to promote the value of our natural bushland. The Society does this through regular meetings and excursions, native plant sales, bushland plant surveys, book sales, donations, and attendance at relevant events and much more …

Murdoch Branch introduced an additional function to numerous tasks our vibrant community has committed to. We have embarked on cleaning up the Roe 8 Reserve. As part of the national Clean Up Australia Day, on Sunday March 6, 2016, The Murdoch Branch of the Wildflower Society joined forces with Cockburn Council, Rethink the Link Alliance, and the Save Beeliar Wetlands community to clean up the beautiful remnant bushland that is standing proud against the ill-conceived idea of pushing a highway through to soon-out-of-capacity Fremantle Port.

It was the 27th celebration of Clean Up Australia Day an idea initiated by Ian Kiernan that in 1993 gained the support of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) that turned into Clean Up the World Day.

The event went far beyond what participants expected as community neighbours jumped out on the street to offer a helping hand and served chilled drinks in the heat to the hardworking volunteers.

CommunityDrink3_web

More than fifty members had shown their interest on Facebook to take part in the event. Fifteen people gathered on the ground to clean up the Roe 8 bushland. The youngest, aged 5 and 7, received Certificates of Participation as recognition by Clean Up Australia, as they did persevere till the end of the event with enthusiasm.

Finley receives a Clean Up Australia Certificate
Finley receives a Clean Up Australia Certificate

Pawel Waryszak, Wildflower Society of WA Murdoch Branch President and the Event Convener, explained what Clean Up Australia Day meant to him: “Clean-Up Australia creates a great community feel. Today I met so many of my neighbours who I would normally not have a chance to talk to”.

Local residents assists in disposing the rubbish.
Local residents assists in disposing the rubbish.

I definitely underestimated the scale of littering in our local bushland. We managed to cover only a quarter of what we planned to do in the two hours allocated to the clean-up”, Pawel concluded.

Bags_web

One of the volunteers, Robin Scott, student at Murdoch University and environmentalist, added enthusiastically: “I came along as I know that dumping off rubbish is a big issue when it comes to the management of bushland in Perth. Clean Up Australia Day lived up to my expectations as I was expecting there to be a lot of rubbish involved”.

Nicole Carey, PhD Candidate in Wetlands Conservation at Murdoch University, who also came to give us a hand said: “I liked that it was an easy way to care for the local environment, while contributing to a national event. A truly fun, social morning”.

Clean Up Australia Day 2016

Pawel calls for a bigger turnout next year with more community involvement that is much needed in order to conserve our beloved bushland.

Author: @PWaryszak

Newsletter now available!

The Wildflower Society of WA newsletter (May 2016, Vol 54 No 2) has now been published electronically.  Members who have elected to receive electronic copies of the newsletter will have received the necessary details by email today.  The printed newsletter will be posted shortly.

The stunning cover photograph of Rhodanthe manglesii  is from two in-depth articles on WA daisies by Hazel Dempster and Jim Barrow – including some very detailed planting notes – just in time for spring rains.

Meet Murdoch Managerial Mob

The AGM in December 2015 resulted in the election of a new group of enthusiastic Murdoch Branch Committee Members: Vice-President: Ben Sims, Secretary: Christine Allen, Treasurer: Mathew Woods, General Committee Members: Christina Birnbaum, Eddy Wajon, Diana Corbyn, Gus King, Neil Goldsborough, Ross Young, and Pawel Waryszak accepted the honour of being re-elected for the second time as Branch President. Let me introduce you to the team:

  1. Pawel Waryszak loves exploring the natural world. In 2012 he came to Perth where he commenced his PhD project at Murdoch University. Pawel’s PhD project looks at the role of the topsoil seed bank transfer in Banksia woodland restoration and he is at the stage of writing up the results now. Pawel is very grateful to Dr Phil Ladd for introducing him to the folks at Wildflower Society of WA who share his passion for wildflowers. He has always enjoyed learning about the plants that grow around him – by the time he was a teenager, he had already spent a big chunk of his pocket money on flora guides of the region he was born in (that is, in the Lublin region of Poland).
  2. Ben Sims grew up in Tasmania and had a love for nature and gardening from a young age. After finishing his Bachelor of Agricultural Science he travelled around Australia and moved to Perth in 2009. After many years travelling he decided to take his career more seriously and in 2012 started with Natural Area as an Environmental Field officer. He nearly instantly gained a passion for WA wildflowers and studied a Diploma of Conservation Land Management and joined the Wildflower Society to learn as much as he possibly could. A few years later he decided he wanted to combine his passions of gardening and nature to create environmentally friendly landscapes and promote the use of endemic and Australian species.
  3. Dr Christine Allen has been a life-long plant-lover and spent her childhood exploring the second-oldest National Park in the world, the Royal National Park in NSW. The weird and wonderful diversity of plants in the southwest of WA drew her to Perth where she completed a PhD at UWA with DPaW on threatened flora in the Stirling Range National Park. Christine is now an active advocate for conservation and sustainability. Favourite plant: Banksia coccinea.
  4. Mathew Woods works in the Bushland’s and Wetland’s of Perth. Mat has a Love of all plant life but especially WA natives. He is particularly fascinated by the food plants and prehistoric flora. He was exposed to the native plants very early while camping in the Jarrah forest and surrounding regions and could not get enough. This fascination led him to study Conservation and Land Management at the Challenger Institute of Technology. In his spare time Mat enjoys practicing traditional bushman skills.
  5. Dr Christina Birnbaum is a plant ecologist interested in a wide range of topics related to plants, including their biology and interactions with belowground micro-organisms in native and novel environments. She moved to Western Australia from Sydney, where she did her PhD on invasive Australian acacias, in 2012 and since then has been fascinated by the unique and beautiful WA flora.
  6. Diana Corbyn has served as Branch President through three terms, has been a Vice President and a committee member throughout the life of the branch. Since she became a lecturer at Challenger TAFE’s Murdoch Campus in 1991 she continually enthuses her love and knowledge of the local flora in hearts and minds of the students she teaches. In 1998 she initiated the wildflower walks and has continued to this day. Come on out this year and meet Diana at Wireless Hill, Orelia or Samson Park.
  7. Dr Eddy Wajon loves nature – whether it be chemical, botanical or zoological, he loves beauty in all its forms. He’s been called a disrupter – challenging the status quo, thinking outside the box, trying to be different, and generally annoying those in power and supposed leadership positions. However, he tries to be creative, inclusive, contributory and a force for positive change.
  8. Angus (Gus) King, like Eddy, loves the beauty and magic of nature, especially our native trees. Other than recognising their beauty and threatened status he knows little about native plants but can still actively contribute to preserving them for future generations. He originally studied geology but more by accident than design had a career in IT. His real passion is renewable energy and even though retired he probably still spends too much time on his computer helping to bring about its adoption rather than learning those plant names
  9. Neil Goldsborough is an Environmental Scientist in Environmental Restoration. Coordinator for the Friends of North Lake & an avid leader for wildflower walks. Demonstrator at Murdoch University for Introduction to Environmental Science since 2004. Has taught at Challenge TAFE (now Institute of Technology) and was an instructor for Rossmoyne Senior High School Bush Rangers. He served as Branch President for 3 years & has been on the committee since joining in 1996.
  10. Ross Young is fresh out of uni, having graduated from Curtin University in 2014 with a Bachelor of Science in Environmental Biology. Don’t let that fool you, though – he’s longer in the tooth than you think, as uni followed a 27-year jaunt with Commonwealth Bank (and an accounting degree). Ross has a keen interest in plant ecology (and birds) and Western Australian plants (and birds), in particular – and has always been interested in the natural world around him. As a kid, he learnt (from his Mum) the pleasure to be had from being able to recognise (and name) the plants (and birds) in the garden (which, even then, included native plants). Banksias are probably his favourite plants (especially Banksia coccinea and Banksia ilicifolia) but, if pressed, he’ll still admit to a lingering fondness for roses.

Come and say Hi. See more updates on our  MURDOCH BRANCH FACEBOOK PAGE.

 

Sandpaper Wattle, Acacia denticulosa

Among the hundreds of species of Acacia, Acacia denticulosa, Sandpaper Wattle, is one of the most striking. The species was first collected near Mt Churchman by Jesse Young, a member of Ernest Giles’ expedition across the Great Victoria Desert in 1875. Young (1852–1909) was the astronomer and principal plant collector (assisted by William Tietkens). With the consent of Thomas Elder, sponsor of the expedition, he passed his specimens to Ferdinand Mueller, Government Botanist of Victoria (remember, there was no botanist in WA then). The collection totalled about 400 species, of which some 63 were new. Mueller named many of these, including this species, published in 1876. The name refers to the toothed margins of the phyllodes but perhaps the more unusual feature of these is the very rough surface from which the common name is derived. This is due to short, conical outgrowths with gland-like tips that are scattered over the lamina and edges of the phyllodes. The phyllodes and young branchlets (also rough at this stage) are slightly sticky.

In the wild the plant is a shrub up to 4 m tall (bottom left) but in the garden it grows to 6 m and can spread to 8 m wide (bottom left). It has an open, rather ungainly habit. Its bark is almost smooth, pale greyish brown, or brown when wet (bottom right). In full flower the tree appears covered with large, golden, woolly caterpillars (centre left).

I bought my plant as a small seedling in April 2008. It grew quickly and by August 2010 was already 3 metres tall.  Since 2010 it has flowered well, starting in July and continuing to the end of August. One reason for its colourful show is that it usually has several spikes per axil. They have a faint ‘wattle’ scent. The fruit is relatively inconspicuous, being a narrow, undulating pod up to 7.5 cm long and 3–4 mm wide, holding small, dark brown shiny seeds (centre right).

The species has no close relatives. The plant has no lignotuber, hence is killed by fire and regenerates from seed. Given adequate space it does not require pruning.  Should this be necessary it should be done progressively as the plant grows, never cutting below the foliage.

Sandpaper Wattle is rare in the wild, known mainly from granite outcrops from near Mt Churchman south-east to Nungarin, with a record near Wongan Hills. It is a Declared Rare Flora (Threatened). Like another rare species from granite rocks, Eucalyptus caesia, it is proving amenable to cultivation.  A plant in the garden of the previous WA Herbarium grew to a large size.

-Alex George

Sandpaper 1 Sandpaper 2 Sandpaper 3 Sandpaper 4

Photos by Alex show the habit, bark, flowers and young pods.

 

References

Brooker, Lesley (2015), Explorers Routes Revisited: Giles 1875 Expedition, Hesperian Press, Carlisle.

Maslin, B.R. & Cowan, R.S. (2001), Acacia denticulosa F.Muell. in A.E.Orchard & A.J.G.Wilson (eds), Flora of Australia 11A: 238, 368, 370, 481, ABRS, Canberra, & CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne.

Southwest Wildlife – three new important books

Over a little more than a year a wealth of books about the Southwest has been published for a variety of interest and knowledge levels these being: Laurie’s The Southwest: Australia’s Biodiversity Hotspot by (University of Western Australia Press, 2015), Groom and Lamont’s Plant Life of Southwestern Australia. Adaptations for Survival and Plant life on the Sandplains in Southwest Australia. A Global Biodiversity Hotspot edited by Hans Lambers (UWA Press, Crawley 2014. 332 pages).

The Southwest: Australia’s Biodiversity Hotspot by Victoria Laurie is for the most general readership. This book is a beautiful homage and introduction to the Southwest’s wonderful plants and animals. A reader commented to a Wildflower Society member that it was an excellent book to keep at hand and read and enjoy, chapter by chapter while learning about the Southwest.

The other two books are focused on the review of plant species level research and how they survive and proliferate in the Southwest. These books are: Groom and Lamont’s Plant Life of Southwestern Australia and Plant life on the Sandplains in Southwest Australia (Kwongan book). The Kwongan is a vegetation type which occupies about 40% of the land surface of Southwest.

The Kwongan book has contributions from a range of authors who have a detailed knowledge of their topics. The book is an update for Kwongan Plant Life on the Sandplains (1984) produced some 30 years ago and aims to assemble current knowledge on particular topics…identifying gaps or inadequacies in knowledge and future research needs of the sandplain (Kwongan).

The book benefits from contributions from a range of authors but at times the diversity of topics means there is lack of unification of some of the themes. While there is some overlap with Plant Life of Southwestern Australia a number of the topics in Plant life on the Sandplains are only found in this publication these being: origins of the sandplains; mammal digging; detailed reviews of plant species conservation and genetics; fluoroacetate containing plants; honey possums; and human usage.

All three books have originated in Perth and principally by Perth based writers and research workers. For the Wildflower Society this is a cause to celebrate as each book raises the profile, knowledge, and (we trust) the conservation of the state’s wildflowers. Each author and editor has kindly shared their work with Society members through talks at a number of Society organised events, and we trust, will continue to do so. All three books deserve a place in our libraries and we suggest several more could be written on the roles of Fungi and Invertebrates in the Southwest.

-Greg Keighery

 

Plant Life of Southwestern Australia: A Review

Plant Life of Southwestern Australia. Adaptations for Survival  by Byron Lamont and Phillip Groom

Over more than 40 years the knowledge of the biology of our native plants for life in the Southwest has hugely benefitted from the work of a group of research botanists trained by Byron Lamont (then at Curtin University). One of these students, Phillip Groom, who has been pivotal in much of this research for 20 years has worked with Byron on producing  Plant Life of Southwestern Australia. Adaptations for Survival  (De Gruyter, Berlin 2015, 258 pages). This book commenced in 2010, focuses on plants of the Southwest.

It is clear that Plant Life benefits having two such knowledgeable authors in Phillip and Byron, demonstrated in more than 100 papers authored by either or both in the reference list. They have assembled a diverse range of information and generalised comment about the outcomes of this information on a single group of organisms, vascular plants.

The book expands on the Southwest’s recognition as Australia’s only biodiversity hotspot, one of 25 recognised internationally (biodiversity is the variability in genes, species and communities). Each of the Southwest’s major environmental constraints is discussed alongside particular plant adaptations. The constraints include: a flat landscape, nutrient impoverished soils, drought and fire. Other related topics include the plant-animal interactions related to the unique range of pollinators, and intensive herbivory (general plant eating) and granivory (seed eating). Particular plant groups, such as the Proteaceae, have met these challenges have proliferated to a remarkable extent, resulting in the Southwest’s species richness and endemism.

Strategies and morphologies plants use to cope with the above factors are covered in 11 chapters: Evolution and Diversity of the Flora; Fire Adaptations; Drought Response; Carnivory; Parasitic Plants; Specialised Nutrient uptake; Pollination Strategies and Syndromes; Leaf Properties; Seed Release and Dispersal and Seed Storage; and Germination and Establishment. Each topic typically has a case study to illustrate the generalisations. An intriguing example of a case study is that on dispersal of fungi by marsupials and, briefly, by native dung beetles. We found the particular strengths of the book (a focus of Phillip’s and Byron’s research) are the sections on fire adaptations, seed biology and the biology of leaves.

Overall the book is an excellent introduction to what makes our plants successful at home and unique at a world scale and leaves one desiring to understand more. Plant Life is available from the Wildflower Society Bookshop and online as an Open Access book at the De Gruyter website.

– Bronwen and Greg Keighery

 

Plant Life of Western Australia

Plant Life of Western Australia by John Beard 2015 edition, edited by A.S. George and N. Gibson.

Since 1990 when John Beard’s Plant Life of Western Australia was first published, it has been an indispensable part of my trips around the state and I suspect with many other plant lovers and those who want to understand the vegetation along with the flora and landscapes of Western Australia.

John Beard’s book is an amazing summation of his work across a third of Australia all done in the days before computerisation and air-conditioned four wheel drive vehicles.

Unfortunately the book has been out of print for many years and this has been a source of frustration to many. Fortunately this has been remedied with the  publication of a second edition of Plant Life Of Western Australia with Alex George and Neil Gibson as editors. They have made few changes in this new edition, keeping to the spirit of John Beard and the changes they have made are explained in their preface. In appendices they have named where possible the people in the photos and in another, plant name changes adopted for this edition. An index of place names is also included after the main index. There was one printing error with captions missing from four photos. A loose leaf errata has remedied this.

Whilst the Department of Parks and Wildlife published an updated Vegetation Map of WA in October 2013, this was based on John Beard’s initial work and his “Plant Life” is as relevant today as when it first came out. It is very fitting that the state’s floral emblem Anigozanthos manglesii has been used to illustrate the front cover of this new edition.

I very much welcome this new edition and I am sure it will become a useful addition to many people’s travels. It is so much more useful in the field than sitting on a book shelf.

– Brian Moyle

On Banksias, Dryandras, and Hairy Fish

Classification has always been about putting similar things in the same box. It is how one defines “similar” that changes. The earliest classifications were presumably pragmatic: things you could eat in one box, things you couldn’t eat in another, things you could use for medicines in yet another. In modern classification the idea of evolution determines what is thought to be similar. Hence, one criterion is that all the organisms in the one box should have evolved from a recent common ancestor. No problem there: both Banksias and Dryandras can be assumed to have a recent common ancestor. It is the second criterion that is tricky: all the descendants of a recent common ancestor should be in the same box. Dryandras can be assumed to have evolved from within the Banksias and therefore this criterion requires that they both be in the same genus.

Let us see what happens if we apply these criteria to humans. The mnemonic for remembering the higher classifications is: King Philip Came Over For Good Soup. (Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species.) We are in the Kingdom Animalia, Phylum Chordata, Sub-Phylum Vertebrata, and Class Mammalia. Other Classes at the same level are: jawless fish (lampreys and the like); cartilaginous fish (sharks and rays); bony fish; amphibians; reptiles; and birds. Reptiles includes lizards and snakes, crocodiles, turtles and dinosaurs.

The first problem is that birds certainly evolved from dinosaurs. The reptile class therefore does not include all the descendants from the one ancestor; birds must go into the dinosaur box. The next problem is that mammals must have evolved from primitive reptiles, so by the same logic, mammals must also go into reptiles. Those of you who think that Dryandras should be sunk into Banksias must therefore think of themselves as hairy lizards.

But wait, there is more. Where did reptiles evolve from? Surely from bony fish. So reptiles and fish should not be at the same level: reptiles, together with birds and mammals, all must go into the fish class. You are not hairy lizards after all: you are hairy, air-breathing fish.

Or we could decide that it was rather silly and abandon the second criterion.

Jim Barrow