Lemon-flowered gum

Eucalyptus woodwardii

''Eucalyptus woodwardii'', commonly known as lemon-flowered gum and also Woodward's blackbutt, is a small tree or mallee that is endemic to Western Australia. The Noongar name for the tree is Gungurra.
Lemon Flowered Gum- Eucalyptus woodwardii  Eucalyptus woodwardii,Lemon-flowered gum

Appearance

The tree typically grows to a height of 6 to 15 metres and a canopy that spreads to over 3 metres . It has smooth, white, pink, greenish or light copper coloured bark that sheds in ribbons. Juvenile leaves are stalked, ovate to broad-lanceolate to elliptical, to 18 x 9 cm. Adult leaves have a disjunct arrangement and are stalked. The leaf blade has a broad-lanceolate shape, basally tapered and are about 18 centimetres in length and 5 cm wide. Leaves are dull, grey-green to glaucous and concolorous. Lemon yellow flowers appear in late winter to late spring. Each axillary, simple conflorescence has three to seven flowered umbellasters on terete peduncles. The buds have a rostrate or urceolate appearance with a calyx calyptrate that sheds early. The fruit is bell or urceolate shaped that are about 1.5 cm long and 1.4 cm wide. Fruits have depressed discs and enclosed valves and contain red coloured seeds that are linear and cuboid.
Lemon Flowered Gum- Eucalyptus woodwardii A small west Australian eucalyptus tree, commonly used as a ornamental garden tree in the eastern Australian states. Eucalyptus woodwardii,Lemon-flowered gum

Distribution

''E. woodwardii is found on flats and rises with a field distribution that is limited to east of Kalgoorlie in Western Australia in the Karonie area, and with sand or deep sandy loam.

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Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionAngiosperms
ClassEudicots
OrderMyrtales
FamilyMyrtaceae
GenusEucalyptus
SpeciesE. woodwardii
Photographed in
Australia