WESTERN AUSTRALIA'S JOURNAL OF SYSTEMATIC BOTANY ISSN 0085–4417 Hopper, S.D. & Nicolle, D. Diamond gum (Eucalyptus rhomboidea: Myrtaceae), a new threatened species endemic to the Bremer Range of the Southwest Australian Floristic Region. Nuytsia 17: 185–194 (2007) A special edition funded by the Western Australian Government’s ‘Saving our Species’ biodiversity conservation initiative. All enquiries and manuscripts should be directed to: The Editor – NUYTSIA Western Australian Herbarium Telephone: +61 8 9334 0500 Dept of Environment and Conservation Facsimile: +61 8 9334 0515 Locked Bag 104 Bentley Delivery Centre Email: [email protected] Western Australia 6983 Web: science.dec.wa.gov.au/nuytsia/ AUSTRALIA All material in this journal is copyright and may not be reproduced except with the written permission of the publishers. © Copyright Department of Environment and Conservation SN.uDy.t sHiao p1p7e: r1 &85 D–1. 9N4i c(2o0ll0e7, )Diamond gum (Eucalyptus rhomboidea: Myrtaceae) 185 Diamond gum (Eucalyptus rhomboidea: Myrtaceae), a new threatened species endemic to the Bremer Range of the Southwest Australian Floristic Region Stephen D. Hopper1 and Dean Nicolle2 1 Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Richmond, Surrey, United Kingdom TW9 3AB 2 Currency Creek Arboretum, 15 Rousillion Promenade, Old Reynella, South Australia 5161 Abstract Hopper, S.D. & Nicolle, D. Diamond gum (Eucalyptus rhomboidea: Myrtaceae), a new threatened species endemic to the Bremer Range of the Southwest Australian Floristic Region. Nuytsia 17: 185–194 (2007). Eucalyptus rhomboidea Hopper & D.Nicolle, first collected by the late Ken Newbey in 1979, is described as new. The species is a member of Eucalyptus ser. Subulatae Blakely allied to E. transcontinentalis Maiden. It is confined to the Bremer Range, and it is at risk from present and proposed mining activities. Introduction The Southwest Australian Floristic Region (SWAFR, sensu Hopper & Gioia 2004) is rich in c. 8000 species of native plants, some 50% of which are endemic, with about a third of the flora under threat. Until recently, those endemics confined to scattered ironstone and mineralised hills on the semi- arid margins of the SWAFR were rarely so threatened as to be of significant conservation concern. However, recent economic circumstances have rendered several such hills and banded ironstone inselbergs sufficiently attractive to fast-track mining. Almost overnight, ranges rich in localized mineral prospectivity and exceptionally rich in plant endemics have become seriously threatened because of the scale of mining proposed or underway (e.g. Bandalup Hill and the Ravensthorpe Range near Ravensthorpe). The taxonomy of many of these threatened endemics needs further research, with several undescribed species among them. Here, we describe one such example. The Bremer Range is a series of mineralised low hills, largely of greenstone with some banded ironstone, extending for 60 km along the south-eastern side of Lake Johnston and Lake Hope, to the north of the Norseman – Lake King road. The Range and its highest peak, Mt Gordon, were named for the naval officer Sir Gordon Bremer by Western Australia’s first Surveyor General John Septimus Roe on his 1848–49 expedition from Albany to the Russell Range (How et al. 1988). Subsequently, the Bremer Range was traversed by the explorer Frank Hann in September 1901, who almost circumnavigated Lake Johnston and named it for the then Surveyor General H.F. Johnston (Donaldson & Elliot 1998). Because the Range is located off and between the two major east-west roads linking Hyden and Lake King to Norseman, it escaped detailed floristic survey until the past three decades. Beard (1976) first described the major structural vegetation formations in the Bremer Range 186 Nuytsia Vol. 17 (2007) area but did not complete sufficient field work to document the flora in detail nor collect the species described as new herein. Eucalyptus rhomboidea Hopper & D.Nicolle was encountered by one of us (SDH) in 1989 in the course of a survey commissioned by the Environmental Protection Authority to delineate proposed conservation reserves in the extensive goldfields eucalypt woodlands between the wheatbelt and Nullarbor Plain of southern Western Australia (Henry-Hall et al. 1990). Subsequently, an earlier collection (K.R. Newbey 5603) made in 1979 was located in the Western Australian Herbarium determined as “Eucalyptus aff. transcontinentalis”. The late Ken Newbey made the collection when engaged as consultant survey botanist for the Biological Survey of the Eastern Goldfields, an interagency project from 1977–1983 then involving the Western Australian Museum, the Department of Fisheries and Wildlife’s Western Australian Wildlife Research Centre, the Western Australian Herbarium and the National Parks Authority (How et al. 1988). In the relevant published report, Eucalyptus rhomboidea is mentioned by Newbey and Hnatiuk (1988) in their Table 4 listing important plant collections as “Eucalyptus sp. (KRN 5603)”. They indicated that this was the first collection of a taxon considered to be undescribed and endemic to the Lake Johnston – Hyden study area. Eucalypt taxonomist Ian Brooker is acknowledged by Newbey and Hnatiuk (1988) for assistance with eucalypt identifications, so it is probable that Brooker was the first to consider Newbey’s collection as sufficiently distinct to be a possible new taxon not matching anything then named. Newbey and Hnatiuk (1988: Table 3 and pp. 134–135) used Eucalyptus rhomboidea to characterise a unique low woodland type (<15 m tall) on undulating greenstone plain country. They indicated that this low woodland was “very rare” with the average size of individual areas encountered in their survey being <1 ha. Newbey and Hnatiuk (1988: 33) provided the following brief description of associated species in the Eucalyptus rhomboidea Low Woodland: “Low trees of Eucalyptus eremophila occurred in Eucalyptus sp. (KRN 5603) Low Woodland. Tall shrubs included Melaleuca lanceolata, and low shrubs included Acacia poliochroa sens. lat., A. rendlei, Eremophila caerulea, M. cardiophylla var. cardiophylla and Westringia cephalantha.” Newbey and Hnatiuk (1988: 134–135) also provided a detailed ecological description of one vegetation site named as a Eucalyptus sp. (KRN 5603) Low Woodland (reproduced herein as Table 1). Based on unpublished field notes of SDH, Henry-Hall et al. (1990: 102) provided a brief account of species associated with E. rhomboidea in their submission for a proposed Bremer Range Nature Reserve: “The diverse eucalypt woodlands present on the Bremer Range uplands include the endemic Eucalyptus “rhomboidea” (Diamond Gum) ... In the vicinity of Burmeister Hill, Eucalyptus “rhomboidea” occurs with E. salubris, E. flocktoniae [= E. urna in this vicinity, Nicolle and Conran 1999], E. salmonophloia and E. cylindrocarpa over an understorey of Melaleuca spp. In the Mt Glasse area, Eucalyptus “rhomboidea” was recorded with E. salubris, E. gracilis. E. eremophila and E. densa subsp. densa over mallees of E. pileata, E. cylindriflora and E. aff. leptophylla [SDH 7212, = E. olivina].” S.D. Hopper & D. Nicolle, Diamond gum (Eucalyptus rhomboidea: Myrtaceae) 187 Table 1. Description of a Bremer Range vegetation site in which Eucalyptus rhomboidea dominates a low woodland (from Newbey & Hnatiuk 1988: 134). Eucalyptus sp. (KRN 5603) [= E. rhomboidea] Low Woodland LOCATION: SE of Mt Glasse DATE: 16 August 1979 VEGETATION Stratum 1: Trees 10–13 m, 3% canopy cover, Eucalyptus sp. (KRN 5603) Stratum 2: Trees 8–10 m, 5% canopy cover, Eucalyptus eremophila Stratum 3: Shrubs 2.1–2.7 m, 5% canopy cover, Melaleuca pauperiflora Stratum 4: Shrubs 1.6–2.0 m, <1% canopy cover, Melaleuca eleuterostachya Stratum 5: Shrubs 1.1–1.5 m, 0.2% canopy cover, Eremophila pachyphylla, Daviesia sp. (KRN 5598) [= D. argillacea Crisp], Exocarpos aphyllus Stratum 6: Shrubs 0.6–1.0 m, 3.6% canopy cover, Melaleuca cardiophylla var. parviflora, Phebalium filifolium, Cryptandra nutans, Glischrocaryon aureum var. angustifolium Stratum 7a: Shrubs 0.0–0.5 m, 10% canopy cover, Eremophila caerulea, Westringia cephalantha, Acacia poliochroa s. lat. [= A. quinquenervia Maslin], A. rendlei, A. erinacea, A. nodiflorus var. ferox, Coopernookia strophiolata, Cryptandra sp. (KRN 6824) [= Cryptandra minutifolia Rye subsp. brevistyla Rye], Daviesia aff. colletoides, Glycyrrhiza acanthocarpa, Grevillea acuaria, Olearia muelleri Stratum 7b: Miscellaneous plants, <1% canopy cover, annuals (sic) Prasophyllum nigricans; parasitic climbers Cassytha melantha. No. of TAXA: 26 LAST BURNT: c. 60 years LANDFORM SOIL PROFILE BEDROCK: greenstone A 0–18 cm: dusky red clay loam; UNIT: undulating plain, greenstone very friable; 30–60% subrounded ironstone GEOLOGICAL SURFACE: mafic extrusive 5–15 mm across rocks, fine to medium-grained B 18–68 cm: weak red medium clay; firm; ELEMENT: low rise inclusions similar to above; slightly calcareous; pH 9.0, too stony to auger deeper SOIL NORTHCOTE: A horizon with surface COMMENTS crust: A2 horizon not bleached; soil reaction DISTRIBUTION: only patch seen, 0.8 ha. trend alkaline PROFILE THICKNESS: 70–100 cm MAIN ORIGIN: in situ weathering MAIN ATTRIBUTE: stony ROCK: nil PAVEMENT: 30–60% cover of material 4–15 mm long, patchy LITTER: Logs few; branches few; leaves broad, deposits 2 cm thick, averaging 6 m apart GROUP: shallow calcareous earths DRAINAGE: good SURFACE: hardsetting STONE: nil 188 Nuytsia Vol. 17 (2007) The proposal for a Bremer Range Nature Reserve by Henry-Hall et al. (1990) was formally adopted as a proposal by the Department of Conservation and Land Management in its South Coast Region Regional Management Plan (Anon. 1992). Conservation of endemics such as E. rhomboidea was included as part of the justification for the proposed nature reserve. Unfortunately, because of mineral prospectivity, this proposal to create the Bremer Range Nature Reserve has yet to be enacted by Government. In the spring of 1994, a comprehensive floristic survey of the Bremer Range and hills to the north was undertaken by Gibson and Lyons (1995, 1998) to define plant communities and contribute towards their conservation. Eucalyptus rhomboidea was recorded in all seven sites clustered as community type 1, with 40 associates (Table 2). These authors established further support for a low woodland community characterised by E. rhomboidea (i.e. their Community Type 1). In April 1998 the junior author traversed the main Bremer Range track and made several more collections of E. rhomboidea as part of a PhD research program investigating the taxonomy and phylogeny of Eucalyptus ser. Subulatae Blakely (Nicolle & Conran 1999; Nicolle et al. 2006). Collectively, we have had the opportunity to conduct comparative herbarium, glasshouse and field studies of E. rhomboidea and other related taxa, as well as examination of types or their photos of all named taxa in Eucalyptus ser. Subulatae. It is clear that the species is indeed new. This paper, therefore, formally describes E. rhomboidea, and briefly discusses its affinities, ecology and conservation status. Table 2. The 40 associated species found with Eucalyptus rhomboidea (in order of co-association) in the seven quadrats clustered as community type 1 by Gibson and Lyons (1988). Note that these data may, in part, include associates of E. sheathiana from near Round Top Hill, which was misidentified as E. rhomboidea (cf. N. Gibson & M. Lyons 1975, PERTH 05306957). Melaleuca pauperiflora Turcz. (7 quadrats) Melaleuca lateriflora Benth. (2) Eremophila clavata Chinnock (6) Melaleuca pentagona Labill. (2) Eucalyptus eremophila (Diels) Maiden (6) Cassytha melantha R.Br. (2) Acacia deficiens Maslin (4) Pultenaea arida E.Pritz. (2) Grevillea acuaria Benth. (4) Melaleuca phoidophylla Craven (2) Westringia cephalantha (4) Daviesia argillacea Crisp (2) Melaleuca uncinata R.Br. (3) Dodonaea stenozyga F.Muell. (2) Acacia hystrix Maslin (3) Eucalyptus flocktoniae (Maiden) Maiden (2) Acacia erinacea Benth. (3) Microcybe multiflora Turcz. var. multiflora (2) Daviesia benthamii Meisn. (3) Eremophila psilocalyx F.Muell. (2) Wilsonia humilis R.Br. (3) Westringia rigida R.Br. (2) Melaleuca eleuterostachya F.Muell. (3) Olearia muelleri (Sond.) Benth. (2) Exocarpos aphyllus R.Br. (3) Dianella revoluta R.Br. (1) Santalum acuminatum (R.Br.) A.DC. (3) Triodia scariosa N.T.Burb. (1) Acacia camptoclada C.R.P.Andrews(2) Eucalyptus transcontinentalis Maiden (1) Melaleuca acuminata F.Muell. (2) S.D. Hopper & D. Nicolle, Diamond gum (Eucalyptus rhomboidea: Myrtaceae) 189 Taxonomy Eucalyptus rhomboidea Hopper & D.Nicolle, sp. nov. Affinis Eucalypto transcontinetali Maiden sed characteribus sequentibus distinguitur: foliis adultis crassioribus et latioribus; alabastris fructibusque non-pendulis; pedunculis et pedicellis brevioribus; alabastris rhombeis; operculis conicis; fructibus obconicis vel pyriformis differt. Typus: Bremer Range track, Western Australia [precise locality withheld for conservation purposes], 21 April 1998, D. Nicolle 2274 (holo: PERTH 07618743; iso: AD, CANB). Eucalyptus rhomboidea Hopper ms, in , in G. Paczkowska & A.R. Chapman, West. Austral. Fl.: Descr. Cat. p. 381 (2000), nom. inval. Tree, non-sprouter (mallet), 8–18 m tall. Bark smooth throughout, dull, grey to light grey over cream to orange-brown or yellow-brown, decorticating in strips and short ribbons. Branchlets pruinose, pith glands absent. Cotyledons bisected. Seedling leaves opposite for >20 pairs, linear at first, soon becoming sessile and strongly decurrent, ovate to elliptic, undulate, to 40 mm long × 32 mm wide, more or less concolorous, dull, blue-green, glaucous, especially on new growth. Adult leaves disjunct, pendulous, petioles 23–30 mm long; lamina lanceolate, 110–155 mm long × 18–35 mm wide, concolorous, dull, blue-green; reticulation moderately dense, oil glands abundant, mostly at intersections of veinlets. Inflorescences axillary, unbranched, held erect, 7-flowered; peduncles somewhat angular, 7–12 mm long; pedicels stout, 1.5–3.5 mm long. Buds pruinose, rhomboid (diamond-shaped), 9–11.5 mm long; operculum conical, 6–7 mm long, smooth, scar present. Stamens irregularly flexed, all fertile; anthers basifixed, ovoid, opening by slits. Flowers creamy-yellow. Ovules in 4 vertical rows. Fruits held erect, usually pruinose, especially when young, shortly pedicellate, obconical although often slightly contracted at rim, 7.5–8.5 mm long × 7.5–9 mm diam., smooth; disc ± level and often prominent, 1–2 mm wide; valves (3)4; style tips exserted. Seed angular-ovoid, dull to slightly glossy, grey-brown, finely reticulate. (Figures 1, 2) Selected specimens examined. WESTERN AUSTRALIA: [localities withheld] 18 Sep. 2002, R. Butler 176-55 (PERTH 06358985); 18 Sep. 2002, R. Butler 176-56 (PERTH 06358993, 06232108); 17 Mar. 2005, G.F. Craig 6381 (PERTH 07218605); 21 Apr. 1998, M. French 452 (PERTH 05202396); 10 May 1989, S.D. Hopper 7208 (PERTH 05229499); 10 May 1989, S.D. Hopper 7209 (PERTH 05229502); 10 May 1989, S.D. Hopper 7210 (PERTH 05229510); 10 May 1989, S.D. Hopper 7216 (PERTH 05229588); 11 May 1989, S.D. Hopper 7230 (PERTH 05229677); 12 May 1989, S.D. Hopper 7233 (PERTH 05231876); 11 May 1989, S.D. Hopper 7234 (PERTH 05231884); 13 Sep. 1994, N. Gibson & M. Lyons 1716 (PERTH 05359708); 13 Sep. 1994, N. Gibson & M. Lyons 1724 (PERTH 05359694); 13 Sep. 1994, N. Gibson & M. Lyons 1725 (PERTH 05295130); 14 Sep. 1994, N. Gibson & M. Lyons 1833 (PERTH 05306914); 14 Sep. 1994, N. Gibson & M. Lyons 1918 (PERTH 05306922); 15 Sep. 1994, N. Gibson & M. Lyons 1761 (PERTH 05307007); 16 Sep. 1994, N. Gibson & M. Lyons 1561 (PERTH 05306930, 05307090); 16 Sep. 1994, N. Gibson & M. Lyons 1586 (PERTH 05306949);16 Sep. 1994, N. Gibson & M. Lyons 1597 (PERTH 05306973); 18 Sep. 1994, N. Gibson & M. Lyons 1706 (PERTH 05307082, 05306981); 16 Aug. 1979, K.R. Newbey 5603 (PERTH 1448196, 2520621); 21 Apr. 1998, D. Nicolle 2271 (PERTH); 21 Apr. 1998, D. Nicolle 2272 (PERTH); 21 Apr. 1998, D. Nicolle 2273 (AD, CANB, PERTH); 30 Oct. 2000, A.V. Slee & J. Connors AVS 4310 (PERTH 05998336); 30 Oct. 2000, A.V. Slee & J. Connors AVS 4315 (PERTH 05998328). 190 Nuytsia Vol. 17 (2007) Figure 1. Holotype of Eucalyptus rhomboidea (D. Nicolle 2274), scale = 3cm. S.D. Hopper & D. Nicolle, Diamond gum (Eucalyptus rhomboidea: Myrtaceae) 191 A B C Figure 2. Eucalyptus rhomboidea (S.D. Hopper 7209, PERTH 05229502). A – habit and habitat; B – base of trunk; C – buds. Photographs: S.D. Hopper. Distribution and habitat. Known only from level and slightly undulating areas in the Mt Gordon to Mt Glasse area of the Bremer Range between Lake King and Norseman, over a linear range of approximately 15 km (Figure 3). It occurs in low open woodland or tall shrubland vegetation on red clay-loams. Detailed ecological data and a list of associated taxa are included in Tables 1 and 2. Associated eucalypt species include E. cylindriflora Maiden & Blakely, E. eremophila (Diels) Maiden, E. densa Brooker & Hopper subsp. densa, E. olivina Brooker & Hopper, E. pileata Blakely, E. salmonophloia F. Muell., E. tortilis L.A.S.Johnson & K.D.Hill and E. urna D.Nicolle. Acacia deficiens Maslin and Grevillea acuaria Benth. are largely restricted to E. rhomboidea woodlands in the Bremer Range area. Flowering period. Buds begin to form in April, some specimens collected in May have both buds and fruits present, (no collections from June, July or August), numerous specimens with both buds and fruits in September, two specimens with buds, flowers and fruits collected on September 16th and 18th, two specimens with buds, flowers and fruits collected on October 30th. 192 Nuytsia Vol. 17 (2007) Figure 3. Distribution of Eucalyptus rhomboidea () in the Southwest Australian Floristic Region. Conservation status. From 1998, E. rhomboidea has had a Priority Four conservation status, as defined by the Conservation Codes for Western Australian Flora (Atkins 2006; Western Australian Herbarium 1998–). The species is at risk from present and future mining activity in the Bremer Range and requires ongoing monitoring. Etymology. From the Latin rhombus (diamond-shaped), referring to the diamond-shaped buds, distinctive and unique within E. ser. Subulatae and unique in the E. transcontinentalis complex. Notes. Eucalyptus rhomboidea is a member of E. ser. Subulatae (Nicolle et al. 2006), distinguished by the combination of deeply bisected cotyledons, lack of pith glands in the branchlets, 7+ flowered inflorescences, fused, fragile, persistent, style remnants and greyish seed with a fine surface reticulation. Within the series, E. rhomboidea is part of the E. flocktoniae (Maiden) Maiden – E. transcontinentalis Maiden complex (E. subser. Decurrentes Brooker on the basis of the strongly decurrent and opposite juvenile leaves (Brooker 2000)). Eucalyptus rhomboidea is most closely related to E. transcontinentalis (especially subsp. transcontinentalis), differing from that species by the broader, thicker adult leaves; the erect inflorescences (± pendulous in E. transcontinentalis) on short peduncles and pedicels; the diamond-shaped buds with a conical operculum (elongated buds due to a long, horn-shaped operculum in E. transcontinentalis); and the obconical to pyriform fruit (urceolate to barrel-shaped in E. transcontinentalis). Eucalyptus rhomboidea occurs within the distribution of E. transcontinentalis, although the two species are not sympatric. Eucalyptus transcontinentalis has not been recorded for the southern part of the Bremer Range, but occurs to the north (south of the Hyden – Norseman road) and to the south (Peak Charles area) of E. rhomboidea without apparent hybrids or intergrades. Eucalyptus rhomboidea, E. transcontinentalis, E. optima L.A.S.Johnson & K.D.Hill and E. urna are the only non-sprouter species known in the series (Nicolle et al. 2006), regenerating from fire by seedlings only.