Eucalyptus diversicolor, commonly known as karri, is a species of flowering plant in the family Myrtaceae and is Endemism to the south-west of Western Australia. It is a tall tree with smooth light grey to cream-coloured, often mottled bark, lance-shaped adult leaves and barrel-shaped fruit. Found in higher rainfall areas, karri is commercially important for its timber.
Karri are an evergreen tree and typically have a heavy, widespread crown. The tree's trunk tend to be long and straight with a diameter of making up about two thirds of the length of the tree.
The trees root can reach depths of up to .
Karri do not form a lignotuber but do form epicormic buds located under the bark along the length of the stem. Trees are able to resprout from the buds after fire or other damage.
The bark on the trunk and branches is smooth, grey to cream-coloured or pale orange, often mottled and is shed in larger plates, short ribbons or small polygonal flakes. The bark sheds each year with the new white bark contrasting with the orange to yellow new bark contrasts against the recently exposed white bark. The bark becomes increasingly granulated with age. The bark is rich in .
The stems and branchlets are round in cross section, the branchlets have no oil glands in the pith.
The leaves on young plants and on coppice regrowth are arranged in opposite pairs, broadly egg-shaped to almost round, paler on the lower surface, long, wide and petiolate. The leaves tend to be more spreading than pendulous. Adult leaves are arranged alternately, glossy dark green on the upper surface, paler below, lance-shaped, long and wide on a flattened or channelled petiole long. The leaves are penniveined, where the veins arise pinnately, in a feather like arrangement, from a single primary vein. The leaves are densely reticulated where the network of veins within the leaf is packed closely together. The prominent vein near the margin of the leaf is very close to the margin and runs almost parallel with it. The yellow oil glands within the leaves are situated in centre of the smallest unreticulated areas. The fine lateral nerves spread at a wide angle from the midrib.
The unbranched are situated in the in small clusters on a common stalk. The flower buds are arranged in groups of seven in leaf axils on a rounded peduncle long, each bud on a pedicel long. The buds are oval, long and wide at maturity with a conical operculum. Flowering has been observed in January, April, May, August and December, and the flowers are white. The flowers have narrow cylindrical Sepal tubes that slowly taper to the base into the pedicel. The many stamen form a continuous ring and has inflected white coloured filaments. The anthers at the end of the filaments have an oblong shape and open into a parallel longitudinal slits.
The fruit is a woody barrel-shaped capsule long and wide on a pedicel long with three valves at or below rim level.
The seeds found within the fruits have a flattened ovoid shape, are grey in colour with a length of . The seeds are pointed at one end with a smooth back and a scar from where it was once attached to the placenta on the underside.
E.diversicolor is relatively fast growing, particularly compared to other Eucalypts, and can grow each year for the first five years of its life. It reaches maturity after 10 to 15 years.
The species has a haploid chromosome number of 12.
The holotype is held at Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria, are held at Cambridge University Herbarium, Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh and Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
The botanical name diversicolor is taken from the Latin word diversus meaning to turn apart and color or "separate colours" and refers to the difference between the top of the leaf and its underside.
The common name is derived from the Noongar name for the tree karri pronounces ka-ree.
Karri is a part of the Symphyomyrtus subgenus, all of which have two opercula on the buds and have four rows of ovules. It is not closely related to any other members of the subgenus and is the sole species in the section Inclusae. The defining feature of this section is having inflexed stamens, flattened ovoid seed shape, enclosed valves of the fruit and the lack of pith glands in the branchlets. Although it has no closely related species it has some affinity with tall Eucalypts found the wet forests of eastern Australian including E.saligna and E.grandis all of which have discolorous adult leaves and seeds with a flattened-ovoid shape.
The heart of the karri forest is found near Nannup and Manjimup through to Denmark.
The total area covered by karri forest is less than which is about one fifth of its virgin growth. The nearest tall tree forests are some to the east in Tasmania and Victoria.
Karri has been introduced to parts of Africa including; Kenya, Tanzania and the Canary Islands.
The species is considered invasive in South Africa where it is a problem in the Western Cape region and is locally known a karie. It commonly invades clearings, fynbos, water courses and road sides often out competing local species and is spread easily by seed dispersal.
Some karri specimens are thought to reach an age of up to 300 years. The soil in which the species grows is often poor, and the tree tends to flower after fire to take advantage of the nutrients released by the combustion of forest litter. The soil is classified as karri loam. Though low in some minor nutrients it is admired for its depth and pasture-growing properties. The depth of the soil is several metres and thought to be created primarily from the bark shed by the tree, which collects at the trunk base to a depth upwards of six metres in mature trees. The karri supports an extensive ecosystem which is connected to the granite outcrops of the lower south-west and the many subsequent creeks and rivers created from runoff. Karri generally dominate in the deep valleys between granite outcrops surrounding the creeks and rivers.
A dense understorey is found in karri forest areas which retains moisture over the hot summers. Associated trees and shrubs found in the understorey include the peppermint ( Agonis flexuosa), karri sheoak ( Allocasuarina decussata), karri wattle ( Acacia pentadenia) and karri oak ( Chorilaena quercifolia). A diverse assemblage of flowers and smaller plants – around 2,000 plant taxa – make up the mosaic of habitats within the karri forests.
The tree has a complex floral cycle and it takes four to five years from the production of flowers to the seeds being released. The production of seed is dependent on a multitude of variables including tree density, availability of pollinators, soil moisture, genetics, nutrients and fire.
Lookout tree were established in the forests using the tallest Karri trees, giving the foresters a commanding view of the landscape.
The idea of using karri trees in this way was first suggested in 1937 by a young forester, Don Stewart, who later became Conservator of Forests. The first of these was built on a large marri ( Corymbia calophylla) at Alco, near Nannup. Eight lookouts were established in the forests between 1937 and 1952. are now used and some of the trees are now used as tourist attractions.
Karri wood is a beautiful mahogany colour, lighter in colour than jarrah. It is used extensively in the building industry, particularly in roofs for the length and knot-free quality of the boards. The wood is also used for flooring, furniture, cabinetry and plywood. The heartwood is golden to reddish brown, often with an orange or purple cast, and tends to darken with age. It has an interlocked grain with a uniform medium-coarse texture. It has the reputation of being termite-prone, although it is nowhere near as susceptible to these insects as pine. It is durable against rot. It is also an excellent furniture wood.
Some of the main streets of early Sydney were paved with blocks of Karri but have been long since covered by Asphalt concrete. The wood was also sent to London for the same purpose.
Karri honey is widely sought after for its clarity, light color and delicate flavor. In 1952 it was estimated that 25% of honey produced in Western Australia was produced in Karri forests. Tourism to this area is also supported by the Karri. Main honey flows occur every four to five years with even larger flows every fifteen years or so.
The species is commercially available and sold in seed form. It germinates readily and prefers a protected sunny position, but is known to be both drought- and frost-sensitive. Although too large for most suburban gardens they are suitable in plantations. Seeds will germinate in three to four weeks and have germination rates of 84%.
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Taxonomy
Distribution and habitat
Ecology
Pollinators
Uses
See also
Further reading
External links
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