Bushy yate

Eucalyptus lehmannii

"Eucalyptus lehmannii", commonly known as bushy yate, is a eucalypt in the myrtle family Myrtaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is a small tree with an oval, spreading form and dense foliage which sometimes reaches to the ground.
Bushy yate - Eucalyptus lehmannii Ready to burst open and let the flowers unfold. Australia,Bushy yate,Eamw flora,Eucalyptus lehmannii,Geotagged

Appearance

"Eucalyptus lehmannii" is a sometimes multi-trunked mallee with smooth bark which is whitish grey to grey-brown and orange-brown and which sheds in strips. The stems of young plants are initially triangular in cross-section with leaves that are alternate, oblong to elliptical or lance-shaped, 5–8 cm long and 1–3 cm wide, glossy green on the upper surface and dull blue-green below. Older stems are smooth and round with alternate leaves. The adult leaves have a petiole 0.1–1.5 cm long and a blade elliptical to oval-shaped, about 4.5–9.5 cm long and 0.7–2.8 cm wide and both surfaces glossy light to mid-green. The oil glands in the leaves common to all eucalypts, are obscure or scattered.

The inflorescences appear in the axils of the leaves, have a flattened stalk 4–11 cm which curves downwards as the flowers open. There may be 11–19 or more buds in each inflorescence, with their bases joined. By the time the bud opens, it is about 3.3–6.5 cm long, including the cap and 0.5–1.0 cm wide at the base of the cap. The stamens are erect and greenish-yellow.
Bushy yate - Eucalyptus lehmannii Flower and unopened flower bud(s)
Not native to Encounter Bay SA .Mostlikely a ornamental roadside planting.  Australia,Bushy yate,Eamw eucalyptus,Eamw flora,Eucalyptus lehmannii,Geotagged

Naming

The species was originally in 1844 named by Schauer in "Plantae Preissianae" as "Symphyomyrtus lehmannii". In 1867, George Bentham in Flora Australiensis placed it in the genus "Eucalyptus" as "Eucalyptus lehmannii" after Johann Georg Christian Lehmann who was Professor of Botany and Director of the Botanic Gardens in Hamburg and editor of "Plantae Preissianae". There is some confusion between the species "E. lehmannii" and "E. conferruminata" - some authors place this tree in "E. conferruminata". Others discriminate between these two species on characters such as operculum length - "E. conferruminata" is said to have a relatively short operculum.

"Eucalyptus lehmannii" belongs in Eucalyptus subgenus "Symphyomyrtus", section "Bisectae", subsection "Hadrotes" because of its coarsely bisected cotyledons, erect stamens and larger, thick-rimmed fruits. The subsection "Hadrotes" contains ten species of which eight do not have oil glands in the branchlet pith. Together these eight species form series "Lehmannianae", a group that has fruit with exserted valves that have fused tips even after the seeds are lost, a feature also shared with the distantly related "Eucalyptus cornuta".

Of the eight species in series "Lehmannianae", four species have the buds in each axillary cluster, fused basally.

Distribution

Bushy yate is found in southern coastal and subcoastal areas from east of Albany towards Israelite Bay, including the Stirling Range. It occurs in the Esperance Plains, Jarrah Forest, Mallee and Warren biogeographic regions of Western Australia growing in sandy soils over granite or quartzite, often with gravel on rocky hills and coastal dunes.

References:

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