Title: Tuart and Weed Guide
1Tuart and Weed Guide
- Tuart Survey Training
- Friends of Trigg Bushland Inc
- www.triggbushland.org.au
2What is a tuart?
- You are likely to see mostly tuart trees.
- The only other trees you are likely to see are
marri, although there are occasional jarrah trees.
3This handout will be available for use during
tuart mapping.
4Tuart trees have long, narrow leaves if mature
and short leaves if juvenile. The underside is
nearly the same colour as the top. Fruit may be
hard to see in the canopy, but will be small.
The trunk of mature trees is usually grey.
5Marri trees have large, obvious fruit (honky
nuts) that are usually visible in the canopy.
The leaves often have reddish stems, and the
underside of the leaf is usually lighter than the
top of the leaf.
6Some Weeds of Trigg Bushland
- Weeds appear different depending on time of year
- Photos and text from Western Weeds, A Guide to
the Weeds of Western Australia, by Hussey,
Keighery, Cousens, Dodd Lloyd (1997)
http//members.iinet.net.au/weeds/index.htm
7- Weeds to identify
- Pelargonium
- Carnation Weed
- Bridal creeper
- Freesia
- Fumitory
- Onion Weed
- Oxalis
- Veldt grass
- Wild oats
- Couch
- Other
8Pelargonium
The genus Pelargonium includes all garden
'geraniums' and several garden varieties.
Pelargonium capitatum (rose pelargonium) is a
straggling shrubby perennial, softly hairy, with
compact heads of pink flowers.
9Geraldton Carnation Weed
Euphorbia terracina (Geraldton carnation weed) is
a smooth leaved erect perennial to 80cm tall,
much branched from the base. The leaves are long
and narrow, 1-4cm long and minutely toothed. The
flower is at the top of the stalk, yellow-green,
and produced in summer. Produces a very toxic and
irritating milky sap when cut.
10Asparagus asparagoides (bridal creeper) is a
southern African plant and is one of the WAs
most urgent environmental weed problems. Birds
relish its fleshy fruits and spread the seeds in
their droppings. It is extremely invasive,
spreading even into undisturbed bushland. It
flowers in spring, dies down in summer, then
shoots rapidly to climb and sprawl over other
vegetation, eventually smothering it. Bridal
creeper is a very serious weed, especially in
coastal dune ecosystems. CODE BRIDAL
11Freesia
- Freesia alba x leichtlinii (freesia) This popular
garden flower with an attractive scent has become
a serious weed of urban bushland. The flower
stems have a characteristic right-angled bend
just below the lowest flower. It flowers in
spring and is a hybrid of two species.
12F. capreolata (white fumitory, climbing fumitory)
has creamy white flowers the tips of the petals
are a dark, blackish red and its leaves are
bright green. It sprawls and climbs, its stems
sometimes reaching 1m in length. On the Swan
Coastal Plain it is common on wasteland, road
verges and shrublands, and flowers mainly in
winter and spring. CODE FUM
13Onionweed
- Trachyandra divaricata (strapweed, dune onion
weed) has flat leaves and the flowering stalk is
repeatedly and widely branched. It flowers in
spring and the white petals often have a pair of
yellow spots near their base.
14Oxalis spp. A family of perennial herbs that
regrow annually from tubers. Leaves usually of
three heart-shaped leaflets. Western Australia
has 14 species of which 12 are naturalised. O.
pes-caprae (soursob, sour grass) is a common weed
with stalked leaves and many yellow flowers. O.
purpurea (four o'clock, purple wood sorrel)
usually with prostrate leaves in a small rosette.
Flowers appear from late autumn to spring,
usually rose-purple with a yellow throat. CODE
OXALIS
15E. calycina (perennial veldt grass) is a tufted
perennial to 80cm tall. The inflorescence is a
drooping erect panicle of reddish-purple flowers.
Flowers in spring. It is a widespread weed of
roadsides and bushland on sandy soils the Swan
Coastal Plain. E. longiflora (annual veldt
grass) is a tufted annual to 30cm tall. The
greenish-purple inflorescence is a narrow
panicle, to 15cm long, flowering in spring. It is
a widespread weed of offshore islands, coastal
dunes and sandy soils. CODE VELDT
16A. barbata (wild oat) is a tufted annual herb to
1.5m tall. The inflorescence is a drooping,
usually one-sided panicle. CODE OAT
17Cynodon dactylon (couch) is a stoloniferous and
rhizomatous prostrate perennial, to several
metres across, rooting at the nodes. The leaves
are bluish-green. The inflorescence of two to
seven digitate, purplish spikes of flowers is
produced in late spring and summer. It is widely
planted as a lawn grass and it invades wetlands
and river edges in southern Western Australia. It
is native to the Kimberley and the tropics
worldwide. CODE COUCH
18Erodium
- Erodium cicutarium (common storksbill) When
green, the fruits form a long beak shape like the
head of a stork or heron, that split when ripe so
that each seed is attached to a long,
spirally-twisted awn. As these 'corkscrews' twist
and relax with changing humidity, they drive the
seed into the ground
19Cape Tulip
- Moraea flaccida (one leaf cape tulip) Prior to
flowering in spring, infestations can be
recognised at a distance from the brown tinge
resulting from the dying tips of their leaves.
Petals up to 4cm long.
20Pink Gladiolus
- Gladiolus caryophyllaceus (pink gladiolus) is
spring-flowering and visually attractive. Its
leaves have a distinctive red margin and, in
young plants, are twisted spirally in an
anti-clockwise direction
21Blue Lupin
- Lupinus cosentinii (Western Australian blue
lupin) has blue flowers in whorls on a long main
stalk, and 7 to 13 leaflets, up to 1.5cm wide.
22Flaxleaf fleabane
- Conyza bonariensis (flaxleaf fleabane) is a
grey-hairy plant, usually not much more than a
metre tall, best distinguished by its stem which
branches below each pyramid of inflorescences,
resulting in a candelabra shape.
23Sea Spinach
- Tetragonia decumbens (sea spinach) is a prostrate
or scrambling soft, semi-succulent perennial, to
5m across, with small, four-lobed yellow flowers
with numerous stamens and dry brown winged
fruits. Flowers in spring.
24Capeweed
- Arctotheca calendula (capeweed) is an abundant
plant, found throughout the south-west, and
increasing rapidly in the arid zone where it is
displacing everlastings. It is a rosette-forming
annual, with greyish, lobed leaves, and heads up
to 6cm across, produced in spring. They have
brilliant yellow ray florets and a centre of
black disc florets.
25Guildford Grass
- Romulea rosea (Guildford grass, onion grass) The
flowers, with petals up to 1.8cm in length, open
first at ground level. As they mature, the flower
stem elongates and bends over, eventually pushing
the seed capsule back under the surrounding
vegetation.
26the end
- Tuart Survey Training
- Friends of Trigg Bushland Inc
- www.triggbushland.org.au