Difference between revisions of "Acacia colei"

From DMT-Nexus Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(General Plant Info)
Line 7: Line 7:
 
'''''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>
 +
 +
 +
Consists of 2 variants:
 +
 +
[[Acacia colei var. colei]]
 +
 +
[[Acacia colei var. ileocarpa]]
  
 
== Geographic distribution ==
 
== Geographic distribution ==

Revision as of 02:36, 15 February 2015

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