Sturt's Desert pea
Gidgee or Stinking Wattle
Green Bird Flower or Rattlepod
Christmas Tree Mulga
Umbrella Bush, Sandhill Wattle
Waddywood
Velvet Wattle, Wyberba Wattle
Whirrakee Wattle (Acacia williamsonii)
Acacia glaucoptera - Flat Wattle
Crotalaria eremaea, Bluebush Pea, Desert Rattlepod
Summer-scented Wattle
Bean Tree, Bauhinia
Green Wattle, Acacia decurrens
Red Mulga, Creekline Miniritchi
Dragon Tree
Desert cassia
Acacia acuminata
Senna artemisioides ssp. helmsii - Blunt Leaved Cassia
Bancroft Wattle
Dogwood- possibly?
A rare wattle is this small erect or spreading tree or shrub. It grows to to about 8 m high and has fissured, dark grey bark. Phyllodes are silvery grey-green and tapering at either end,
To 10m high with wispy to dense pendulous branches resembling casuarinas. Young trees have stiff foliage with sharp points, probably as a defence against browsers.
Acacia peuce is only found in 3 locations, all within the arid zone of the Simpson and Strzelecki desert. Mature trees slowly reach a height of about 10-15m. They have long narrow,
Very decorative shrub with a neat rounded or obconic shape and a profusion of bright golden inflorescences in the upper axils.
Shrub, 0.3-2.1 m high. Fl. white-cream/yellow/pink, Apr to Dec. Variety of soils. Near water, rocky hills, breakaways, salt pans, clay flats.
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