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Casuarina, also known as she-oak, Australian pine and native pine, is a genus of flowering plants in the family , and is native to Australia, the Indian subcontinent, , of the western Pacific Ocean, and eastern Africa.

Plants in the genus Casuarina are or trees with green, pendulous, branchlets, the leaves reduced to small scales arranged in whorls around the branchlets, the male and female flowers arranged in separate spikes, the fruit a cone containing grey or yellowish-brown winged seeds.


Description
Plants in the genus Casuarina are dioecious trees (apart from C. equisetifolia that is monoecious), with fissured or scaly greyish-brown to black bark. They have soft, pendulous, green, branchlets, the leaves reduced to scale-like leaves arranged in whorls of 5 to 20 around the branchlets. The branchlets are segmented at each whorl with deep furrows that conceal the . Male flowers are arranged along branchlets in spikes with persistent bracteoles, female flowers in spikes on short side-branches (effectively "peduncles") that differ in appearance from vegetative branchlets. After fertilisation, the female spikes develop into "cones" with thin, woody bracteoles that extend well beyond the cone body. The cones enclose grey or yellowish-brown winged seed known as samaras.
(1992). 9780333474945, Macmillan Publishers.


Ecology
Casuarina are attacked by a range of herbivorous insects.

  • Hymenoptera: The wasps Bootanelleus orientalis and another species () feed on seeds. Selitrichodes casuarinae and S. utilis () induce .
  • Lepidoptera: Most lepidopteran herbivores are in the family . Zauclophora pelodes, Araeostoma aenicta and sp. feed on leaves, and the latter two are also leaf tiers. Cryptophasa irrorata bores in branches and stems. Outside of Oecophoridae, there are fruit- and leaf-feeders in families and .
  • Curculionidae: A weevil in genus feeds on cones. The genera and Apion have also been recorded on Casuarina, but the nature of their associations is unknown.
  • Hemiptera: jumping plant lice () feed on sap of Casuarina. Another hemipteran associated with this genus is the felt scale Choneochiton casuarinae ().
  • Diptera: The gall midge Ophelmodiplosis clavata () induces galls on branchlet tips.


Taxonomy
The genus Casuarina was first formally described in 1759 by in Amoenitates Academicae and the first species he described (the type species) was Casuarina equisetifolia. The generic name is derived from the word for the , kasuari, alluding to the similarities between the bird's feathers and the plant's foliage.
(2025). 9780849326752, CRC Press. .


Species List
The following is a list of Casuarina species accepted by Plants of the World Online as of April 2023:
  • Casuarina collina Poiss. ex Pancher & Sebert ()
  • Casuarina cristata Miq. – belah, muurrgu (Qld., N.S.W.).
  • Casuarina cunninghamiana Miq. – river oak, river sheoak, creek oak (Qld., N.S.W., A.C.T., N.T.)
  • Casuarina equisetifolia L. – coastal she-oak, horsetail she-oak (South Asia, Southeast Asia, Australia)
  • Sieber ex Spreng. – swamp she-oak, swamp buloke, marsh sheoak (Qld., N.S.W.)
  • Casuarina grandis L.A.S.Johnson ()
  • Casuarina junghuhniana Miq. (Indonesia)
  • Miq. – swamp she-oak, swamp oak, western swamp oak (W.A., S.A., Vic., N.S.W.)
  • Casuarina oligodon L.A.S.Johnson (New Guinea)
  • Casuarina orophila L.A.S.Johnson (New Guinea)
  • F.Muell. ex L.A.S.Johnson – black oak, belah, kariku (W.A., S.A., Qld., N.S.W., Vic.)
  • Casuarina potamophila Schltr. (New Caledonia)
  • Casuarina tenella Schltr. (New Caledonia)
  • Schltr. (New Caledonia)

In 1982, Lawrence Johnson raised the genera and in the Journal of the Adelaide Botanic Gardens, and transferred some species previously included in Casuarina to the new genera. The species of Allocasuarina previously in Casuarina are: A. acuaria, A. acutivalvis, A. campestris, A. corniculata, A. decaisneana, A. decussata, A. dielsiana, A. distyla, A. drummondiana, A. drummondiana, A. fraseriana, A. grevilleoides, A. helmsii, A. huegeliana, A. humilis, A. inophloia, A. lehmanniana subsp. lehmanniana, A. littoralis, A. luehmannii, A. microstachya, A. monilifera, A. muelleriana, A. nana, A. paludosa, A. paradoxa, A. pinaster, A. pusilla, A. ramosissima, A. rigida, A. robusta, A. striata, A. tessellata, A. thuyoides, A. torulosa, A. trichodon and A. verticillata. The species of Gymnostoma previously included in Casuarina are G. chamaecyparis, G. deplancheanum, G. intermedium, G. leucodon, G. nobile, G. nodiflorum, G. papuanum, G. poissonianum, G. rumphianum and G. sumatranum and G. webbianum.


Invasive species
C. cunninghamiana, and C. equisetifolia have become naturalized in many countries, including , , , , , , , , , , , , , , and . They are considered an USFS FEIS: CasuarinaUSDA Forest service: Casuarina in the United States, especially in southern where they have nearly quadrupled in number between 1993 and 2005 and are called the Australian pine. C. equisetifolia is widespread in the where it grows both on the seashore in dry, salty, calcareous soils and up in the mountains in high rainfall areas on volcanic soils. It is also an invasive plant in Bermuda, where it was introduced to replace the Juniperus bermudiana windbreaks killed by a scale insect in the 1940s.


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