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10th leaf stage. Copyright CSIRO

10th leaf stage. Copyright CSIRO

Cotyledon stage, epigeal germination. Copyright CSIRO

Scale bar 10mm. Copyright CSIRO
Gossia hillii
Family
Myrtaceae
Botanical Name
Gossia hillii (Benth.) N.Snow & Guymer
Snow, N. & Guymer, G. P. (2003) Systematic Botany Monographs 65: 50. Type: ?.
Synonyms
Austromyrtus hillii (Benth.) Burret, Notizblatt des Botanischen Gartens und Museums zu Berlin-Dahlem 15(3): 501(1941), Type: ?. Myrtus hillii Benth., Fllora Australiensis 3: 275(1867), Type: Queensland, Moreton Bay, E.F.A. Fitzalan s.n.; Lecto: K; Isolecto: MEL. Myrtus opaca C.T. White, Proceedings Royal Society Queensland 53: 218(1942), Type: Queensland, C.T. White 9592; Holo: BRI. Austromyrtus opaca (C.T. White) L.S. Smith, Proceeding Royal Society Queensland 67: 35(1956), Type: ?.
Common name
Hill's Ironwood; Hill's Lignum; Scaly Myrtle
Stem
A small tree not exceeding 30 cm dbh, sapwood surface sometimes corrugated.
Leaves
Oil dots visible with a lens if not visible to the naked eye. Leaf blades about 2.5-4.5 x 1.5-2.5 cm. Midrib raised on the upper surface and petiole channelled on the upper surface. Leafy twigs about 1 mm diam. Small, dark stipules or stipule-like appendages visible on the younger twigs.
Flowers
Peduncles long and slender and are usually assumed to be pedicels. Calyx tube (hypanthium) clothed in pale prostrate hairs. Sepals about 1.5 mm long, pubescent adaxially, margins fimbriate, petals +/- glabrous except for the fimbriate margin. Petals about 2-3 mm long, about 20 oil dots per petal.
Fruit
Fruits globular, about 8-9 mm diam., calyx lobes persistent at the apex. Testa relatively thick, hard and horny. Embryo coiled with the cotyledons +/- in the middle of the spiral. Cotyledons much more slender than the radicle.
Seedlings
Cotyledons elliptic to ovate, about 10-12 x 3-4 mm; stipules present. Oil dots clearly visible with a lens particularly towards the margin. At the tenth leaf stage: leaf blade narrowly ovate or elliptic, +/- sessile. Intramarginal vein not distinct. Stem strongly 4-angled to almost winged.
Distribution and Ecology
Endemic to Australia, occurs in NEQ and southwards as far as north-eastern New South Wales. Altitudinal range in NEQ from 700-1000 m. Grows as an understory tree in well developed upland and mountain rain forest.
Natural History
This shrub or small tree is already widely cultivated for its dense growth habit and glossy leaves.
NEQ
X
Tree
X
RFK Code
306