Australian Plant Image Index
Eucalyptus dolichorhyncha
by Holliday, I.G.
(©
Director of National Parks)
From Greek dolicho- (narrow) and rhynchos (nose), referring to the long narrow operculum.
Mallet to 6 m high. Non-lignotuberous.
Bark smooth throughout, pale grey over pale orange to pale brown, shedding in broad ribbons.
Branchlets lacking oil glands in the pith.
Juvenile growth (coppice or field seedlings to 50 cm): stems rounded to square in cross-section; juvenile leaves always petiolate, alternate, ovate to lanceolate, 3–10 cm long, 2–6 cm wide, greyish green and dull but becoming green higher up stem.
Adult leaves alternate; petiole 0.8–1.6 cm long; blade lanceolate to oblong, 4.5–9 cm long, 1–2.7 cm wide, base tapering to petiole, margin entire, apex pointed to rounded, concolorous, dull and slightly bluish green at first maturing glossy green, penniveined or with side veins acute, reticulation dense and erose, or obscure, intramarginal vein fairly close to margin, oil glands mostly intersectional.
Inflorescence axillary unbranched, peduncles widening distally, pendulous, 2–4.2 cm long, bud solitary, pedicel 0.8–1.5 cm long.
Mature buds oblong in outline and square in cross-section with wings at the corners, smooth in between (3.2–5.5 cm long, 1–1.8 cm wide), red in colour, scar present, outer operculum "shed" at bud-size approximately a fifth mature size and often remains stuck to apex of inner operculum as a black "scab", inner operculum prominently beaked (operculum 1–3.2 cm long), stamens inflexed, anthers oblong to globoid, versatile, subbasifixed, dehiscing by longitudinal slits, style long and straight, stigma tapered to rounded, locules 3 or 4, the placentae each with 6 or 8 vertical rows of ovules.
Flowers yellow.
Fruit pedicellate (pedicels 0.8–1.5 cm long), oblong, square in cross-section and winged, 2.9–4 cm long, 1.3–3 cm wide, disc descending vertically, valves 3 or 4, enclosed.
Seeds black to blackish brown, 2–5 mm long, more or less pyramidal to flattened and 4-angled with a conspicuous marginal flange, dorsal surface scarcely reticulate, hilum terminal.
Cultivated seedlings (measured at c. node 10): cotyledons reniform; stems rounded to square in cross-section; leaves always petiolate, opposite for 4 or 5 nodes then alternate, ovate, 2.8–7 cm long, 2–4.5 cm wide, dull, green.
Eucalyptus dolichorhyncha is a mallet. It has smooth bark and glossy, green to olive-green adult leaves and with obvious large red buds with prominent beak on the operculum, but the flowers (stamens) are yellow.
Flowering recorded in January–February, April, August–September and December.
Endemic to Western Australia, where it is restricted to a small area south of Salmon Gums to northeast of Esperance.
Common on flats or slightly rising ground with whitish to yellowish sandy clay soil.
Eucalyptus dolichorhyncha, once included in E. forrestiana, is a popular ornamental widely cultivated in southern Australia and also in California, U.S.A. The red fruits on drooping stalks are a feature.
Eucalyptus dolichorhyncha (Brooker) Brooker & Hopper, Nuytsia 9(1): 57 (1993); E. forrestiana Diels subsp. dolichorhyncha Brooker, J. Roy. Soc. W. Australia 56: 74 (1973). Type: Grasspatch, W.A., 15 Mar. 1957, J.W. Green 1252; holo: PERTH.
Eucalyptus dolichorhyncha belongs in Eucalyptus subgenus Symphyomyrtus section Dumaria because the buds have two opercula, stamens are strongly inflexed, ovules are in six or eight rows on the placentae and cotyledons are reniform. E. dolichorhyncha forms a small subgroup (series Tetrapterae) with E. stoatei, E. forrestiana and E. tetraptera, all with single-budded inflorescences that are ultimately red, all lacking oil glands in the pith of the branchlets, and with blackish pyramidal seed.
Eucalyptus dolichorhyncha is distinguished from its close relatives by the combination of slenderly beaked operculum and four-winged buds and fruit that are square in cross-section. The species most often confused with E. dolichorhyncha is E. forrestiana, but the latter has a shallow disc-like operculum that is never beaked. Otherwise, it is very similar.
See also MORE ABOUT EUCALYPTS.
See Eucalyptus dolichorhyncha in EUCLID 4th edn (2020).
Brooker, M.I.H. (2000). A new Classification of the Genus Eucalyptus L'Her. (Myrtaceae). Australian Systematic Botany 13(1): 79–148.
Brooker, M.I.H. & Hopper, S.D. (1993). New series, subseries, species and subspecies of Eucalyptus (Myrtaceae) from Western Australia and from South Australia. Nuytsia 9(1): 1–68.
Slee, A.V., Brooker, M.I.H., Duffy, S.M. & West, J.G. (2020). EUCLID - Eucalypts of Australia Forth Edition. (Centre for Australian National Biodiversity Research: Canberra, CSIRO, ABRS and others).
Published 6 February 2025. Adapted from EUCLID - Eucalypts of Australia Forth Edition (2020).
Australian Plant Image Index
Eucalyptus dolichorhyncha
by Holliday, I.G.
(©
Director of National Parks)
Author - A.V. Slee, M.I.H. Brooker, S.M. Duffy, J.G. West
Editor - P.G. Kodela
Contributor - John R. Busby (editorial assistance)
Acknowledgements -
Cite this profile as: A.V. Slee, M.I.H. Brooker, S.M. Duffy, J.G. West. Eucalyptus dolichorhyncha, in P.G. Kodela (ed.), Flora of Australia. Australian Biological Resources Study, Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water: Canberra. https://profiles.ala.org.au/opus/foa/profile/Eucalyptus%20dolichorhyncha [Date Accessed: 14 March 2025]