Plants of South Eastern New South Wales
Acacia subporosa
Bower wattle, River wattle, Narrow-leaf bower wattle, Sticky bower wattle
Fabaceae
Wet forest, often in moist gullies and along streams. Coast and ranges south of Tuross Head.
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
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