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Agathis robusta, commonly known as Queensland kauri (pine), kauri pine or smooth-barked kauri, is a tree in the family . It has a disjunct distribution, occurring in Papua New Guinea and in two widely separated locations in , Australia. It was first described in 1859 and was heavily logged in the mid-19th century. It is not a true pine (family ), but Araucariaceae and Pinaceae are both conifer families in the class Pinopsida.


Description
Agathis robusta is a large tree with a straight cylindrical trunk, which can often reach a height of , and occasionally . The trunk is usually about diameter at breast height (DBH), but occasionally may reach . The bark is orange-brown to grey-brown, smooth, but shedding in large flakes.

The linear-elliptic leaves are up to long and wide, with numerous fine parallel veins and no midrib. They are carried on petioles measuring and are arranged in opposite pairs (rarely whorls of three) on the stem.

The globose, green measure diameter with up to 440 scales, and mature in 18–20 months after pollination. They disintegrate at maturity to release the seeds. The male (pollen) cones are cylindrical, long and diameter.


Taxonomy
The Queensland kauri was first described as Dammara robusta in 1859 by the German-born Australian botanist Ferdinand von Mueller and published in the journal Quarterly Journal and Transactions of the Pharmaceutical Society of Victoria. In 1883 the Colonial Botanist of Queensland Frederick Manson Bailey published a paper in which he gave the species its current binomial name Agathis robusta.


Subspecies
There are two recognised subspecies , namely:
  • Agathis robusta subsp. nesophila Whitmore which is restricted to eastern and
  • Agathis robusta ssp. robusta, the autonymous subspecies, which is native to New Guinea and Queensland.


Etymology
The genus name Agathis is from the Ancient Greek word 'ball of thread', a reference to the appearance of the female cones. The species epithet is derived from the Latin word meaning 'robust'.


Common names
This species is most commonly known as 'Queensland kauri' or 'kauri pine', but alternative names include 'dundathu pine' (from the town of Dundathu in southern Queensland), 'north Queensland kauri', 'south Queensland kauri' and 'smooth barked kauri'.


Distribution and habitat
Agathis robusta occurs in three distinct locations — a southern population in southeast Queensland in the regions around , Maryborough, and K'gari (Fraser Island); another population in northeast Queensland in the regions from Ingham to Cooktown, including the Atherton Tablelands; and the third in . The north Queensland population was formerly recognised as Agathis palmerstonii, but is now considered to be synonymous with the southern grouping.

The species grows in rainforest on well-drained soils of various types, at elevations up to and where the annual rainfall is between .


Ecology
The seeds of the Queensland kauri are eaten by sulphur-crested cockatoos ( Cacatua galerita).


Conservation
Agathis robusta is listed by both the Queensland Department of Environment and Science and the as least concern. However, the IUCN assessment states that the "subspecies in Papua New Guinea has been assessed as Vulnerable" due to ongoing, albeit limited, logging.


Pests and diseases
A number of species utilise the Queensland kauri as a host plant, including Agathiphaga queenslandensis, Heteropsyche poecilochroma, Leipoxais rufobrunnea, , , , and .


Uses
This tree produces a high quality timber, which was used for a variety of purposes, such as cabinetmaking, joinery, framing, and plywood. This led to it being heavily logged from the mid-19th century, with the result that the large stands of these trees, which were once common, are now gone, although many individual trees may still be found. Logging in north Queensland continued until the establishment of the Wet Tropics of Queensland World Heritage area in 1987.


Cultivation
State-owned plantations of kauri were established in both north and south Queensland in the first half of the 20th century and met with varying degrees of success; however, today little more than of plantation kauri exists.

More than 80 of these trees have been planted in the streets and parks of .

A long avenue of mature kauris, planted in the 1930s, are maintained at the heritage-listed North Queensland tourist attraction, .


Gallery
File:Agathis-robusta-SF23011-01-edit.jpg|Specimen in the Cairns Botanic Gardens File:Agathis robusta, Peradeniya 01(js).jpg|Trunk File:Agathis-robusta-SF23016-02.jpg|Near Freshwater Ck, File:Agathis robusta kz8.jpg|Foliage File:Agathis-robusta-SF22354-03.jpg|Female and male cones File:Agathis-robusta-SF23003-01.jpg|Scales and seeds from female cone File:Agathis robusta (Queensland Kauri) seedling II, by Omar Hoftun.jpg|Seedling File:StateLibQld 1 109472 Charlie Ball and Jack Ring with a large log of Kauri pine.jpg|Harvesting kauri logs, circa 1912


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