Plants of South Eastern New South Wales

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Acacia subporosa

Common name

Bower wattle, River wattle, Narrow-leaf bower wattle, Sticky bower wattle

Family

Fabaceae

Where found

Wet forest, often in moist gullies and along streams. Coast and ranges south of Tuross Head.

Notes

Tree or shrub to 12 m tall. Fleshy seed stalks/arils. Bark smooth. Branchlets cylindrical, with low ridges alternating with resinous bands, arching to weeping, surfaces hairless to hairy with short hairs, and often sticky. 'Leaves' alternating up the stems, 4-12 cm long, 4-11 mm wide, dotted with resin glands, often sticky, hairless but the margins more or less appressed-hairy, 2–5 main longitudinal veins with minor longitudinal and lateral veins between, tips pointed or somewhat pointed. Flower heads yellow, globular, 16-30 flowered (easiest seen in late buds), 5-9 mm in diameter, in clusters of 1-3. Flowers Winter to Summer.

Family was Mimosaceae.

Rare Vic.

Intermediate forms between narrow-leaved Acacia cognata and broader-leaved Acacia subporosa occur.

PlantNET description:  http://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Acacia~subporosa  (accessed 28 April 2021)

World Wide Wattle photos, line drawings and description:  http://www.worldwidewattle.com/imagegallery/image.php?p=0&l=s&id=23840&o=1