Difference between revisions of "Acacia colei"

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(General Plant Info)
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'''''Acacia colei''''' is a perennial [[Shrub|bush]] or [[tree]] native to [[Australia]] and southern [[Asia]].  A common name for it is '''Cole's Wattle'''.
 
'''''Acacia colei''''' is a perennial [[Shrub|bush]] or [[tree]] native to [[Australia]] and southern [[Asia]].  A common name for it is '''Cole's Wattle'''.
 
It grows to a height of up to 9 m.  ''Acacia colei'' blooms from June through July and the flowers are bright yellow.<ref>[http://www.environment.gov.au/cgi-bin/species-bank/sbank-treatment.pl?id=55598 Australian Biological Resources Study]</ref>
 
It grows to a height of up to 9 m.  ''Acacia colei'' blooms from June through July and the flowers are bright yellow.<ref>[http://www.environment.gov.au/cgi-bin/species-bank/sbank-treatment.pl?id=55598 Australian Biological Resources Study]</ref>
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Consists of 2 variants:
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[[Acacia colei var. colei]]
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[[Acacia colei var. ileocarpa]]
  
 
== Geographic distribution ==
 
== Geographic distribution ==

Revision as of 01:36, 15 February 2015

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Acacia colei Wikipedia.png Plant-icon.png
DMT (Dr. Karl and abc.net.au 2005) 1%+ in bark (different net reports)



General Plant Info

Acacia colei is a perennial bush or tree native to Australia and southern Asia. A common name for it is Cole's Wattle. It grows to a height of up to 9 m. Acacia colei blooms from June through July and the flowers are bright yellow.[1]


Consists of 2 variants:

Acacia colei var. colei

Acacia colei var. ileocarpa

Geographic distribution

Colei-map.jpg

Identification

Phyllodes are 10-19 cm long and 20-55 mm wide, usually with three prominent longitudinal nerves. A dense covering of short hairs on the phyllodes gives the plant a characteristic silvery-blue appearance.

Alkaloid content

Claimed to contain up to 1.8% DMT in bark[2], 0.2-0.6% in leaf,[3] but others have found no alkaloids, or nearly none in this species

Other uses

Its uses include environmental management, forage and wood. The seeds are good-tasting[4] and are potentially useful as food for humans. The results of tests in Nigeria for the feasibility of raising the tree as a drought-resistant food crop came out very positively.[5]

Extraction

Cultivation

Suppliers

Links

References

  1. Australian Biological Resources Study
  2. ABC radio, different net reports
  3. www.abc.net.au
  4. ECHO Education Concerns for Hunger Organization
  5. World Wide Wattle