Corymbia calophylla


W. & SW. Australia (as per WCSP);

Australia (widespread: SW-Western Australia), trop. Africa (introduced), Fiji
(introduced), Hawaii (introduced) (Oahu (introduced), Hawaii Isl. (introduced)),
Sri Lanka (introduced), Colombia (introduced)
as per Catalogue of Life;


Corymbia calophylla (also known as Eucalyptus calophylla R. Br.) is a bloodwood native to Western Australia. Common names include Marri and Port Gregory Gum,[1] and a long-standing usage has been Red Gum due to the red gum effusions often found on trunks.

It is distinctive among bloodwoods for its very large buds and fruit (colloquially “honky nuts” in Western Australia).
In 2009, Parra-O and colleagues published a combined analysis of nuclear rDNA (ETS + ITS) and morphological characters published to clarify relationships within the genus Corymbia. C. calophylla was found to form a natural group with two other Western Australian species C. ficifolia and C. haematoxylon. They classified the group as section Calophyllae within the subgenus Corymbia.[2]

It is related and somewhat similar to the Red-flowering Gum (Corymbia ficifolia). C. calophylla differs in being much larger (to about 50 metres (160 ft) high in the wild), having very much larger buds and fruit, and having flowers that are usually white to pink instead of red. However, in some areas hybridisation makes identification difficult.
It will grow on comparatively poor soil, but good specimens are considered an indicator of the better agricultural soils.

(From Wikipedia on 18.12.15)




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Updated on December 24, 2024

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