Callitris arenosaA.Cunn. ex
R.T.Baker &
H.G.Sm. Callitris columellaris var. campestris Silba Callitris columellaris subsp. campestris (Silba) Silba Callitris columellaris f. glauca F.M.Bailey Callitris columellaris var. intratropica (R.T.Baker & H.G.Sm.) Silba Callitris columellaris subsp. intratropica (R.T.Baker & H.G.Sm.) Silba Callitris columellaris var. microcarpa (Benth.) Govaerts Callitris glaucaR.Br. ex R.T.Baker & H.G.Sm. Callitris glaucophylla J.Thomps. & L.A.S.Johnson Callitris hugelii (Carrière) Franco Callitris intermedia R.T.Baker & H.G.Sm. Callitris intratropicaR.T.Baker & H.G.Sm. Callitris robusta var. intratropica (
R.T.Baker & H.G.Sm.) Ewart &
O.B.Davies Callitris robusta var. microcarpa (
Benth.)
F.M.Bailey Frenela columellaris (
F.Muell.)
Parl. Frenela hugelii Carrière Frenela mooreiParl. Frenela robusta var. microcarpaBenth. Frenela verrucosa var. laevisC.Moore Octoclinis backhouseiW.Hill
Callitris columellaris is a species of
coniferoustree in the family
Cupressaceae (cypress family), native to most of
Australia. Common names include white cypress,[3]white cypress-pine, Murray River cypress-pine, Bribie Island pine and northern cypress-pine. Callitris columellaris has become
naturalised in
Hawaii[4] and in southern
Florida.[5][6][7]
Description
It is a small
evergreentree, 4–12 m (rarely to 20 m) high, with a trunk up to 50 cm diameter. The
leaves are scale-like, 2–6 mm long and 0.5 mm broad, arranged in decussate whorls of three on very slender shoots 0.7–1 mm diameter. The
cones are globose, 1–2 cm diameter, with six triangular scales, which open at maturity to release the seeds.
Taxonomy
Some authors (e.g. Thompson & Johnson 1986, followed by the Flora of Australia Online) divide it into three species (or occasionally as
varieties), based largely on the foliage colour, with green plants predominating on the east coast of Australia, and glaucous plants in the interior, and on cone size, with on average marginally smaller cones in tropical areas (north of 22°S). However, others (e.g. Blake 1959, Farjon 2005) point out that both the foliage colour and cone size is very variable, even from tree to tree in local populations, and maintain that it is impossible to distinguish three taxa within the species. When split into three species, the following names apply:
Callitris columellaris F.Muell. sensu stricto – coastal northeast
New South Wales, southeast
Queensland.
Callitris glaucophylla Joy Thomps. & L.A.S.Johnson (syn. C. columellaris var. campestris Silba; C. glaucanom. inval.; C. hugelii nom. inval.) – throughout most of the southern half of Australia.
Callitris intratropica R.T.Baker & H.G.Smith (syn. C. columellaris var. intratropica Silba) – northern Queensland, northern
Northern Territory, northern
Western Australia.
Pollination
Eric Rolls described the pollination of C.columellaris thus: "At pollination time when hundreds of cones go off together
with a sharp crack and spurt brown pollen a metre into the air, the whole
tree shivers."[8]
Blake, S. T. (1959). New or noteworthy plants, chiefly from Queensland. Proc. Roy. Soc. Queensland 70 (6): 33–46.
Farjon, A. (2005). Monograph of Cupressaceae and Sciadopitys, pp. 507–513. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
ISBN1-84246-068-4.
Thompson, J. & Johnson, L. A. S. (1986). Callitris glaucophylla, Australia's 'White Cypress Pine' – a new name for an old species. Telopea 2 (6): 731–736.