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Summary of the final report on
the Australian Flora Foundation funded project:
The status of the waddi tree (Acacia peuce) in Queensland
Jon Luly1, Joe Holtum2 and Michelle Waycott3
1School of earth and Environmental Sciences, James Cook University Townsville
Q 4811
2School of Marine and Tropical Biology, James Cook University Townsville
Q 4811
3State Herbarium of South Australia Grant
details Final report

Summary
The waddi tree stand at Boulia is the most numerous of the three
known localities in which the tree grows. The stand comprises somewhere
around 100,000 individuals and has extended geographically, and in density
since the 1970s. The stand maintains a high genetic diversity and is actively
recruiting. We believe it to be in good health.
Waddi trees recruit opportunistically and depend on canopy seed storage
to supply seeds, most of which die unless there has been above average
rainfall. Seedlings send down a rapidly growing tap root in order to keep
up with subsidence of the soil wetting front. They establish best on sandy
sites which allow rapid root penetration and extraction of water at low
soil water potentials but do not persist on source bordering dunes. There
are indications that waddi trees can reproduce by suckering from shallow
horizontal roots. The extent of asexual reproduction in the stand has
yet to be fully evaluated. The horizontal roots probably play a water
storage function in addition to acting as reservoirs for buds. The anatomy
and function of shallow roots is under active investigation.
Grazing activity is not presently affecting the health of the stand. Cattle,
kangaroos and camels browse foliage, devour seedlings and trample roots
however they also reduce the significant risks to the stand posed by uncontrolled
fire. Waddi trees exhibit structural adaptations to browsing by vertebrates
and we believe this to contribute to their resilience to grazing in this
the wettest part of their range.
Waddi trees do not appear to be extremely long lived. Radiocarbon dating
suggests that the majority of large trees are approximately 200 years
old. Some exceptional individuals may live longer but the beginning of
senescence in trees of the sizes dated suggests that the majority would
die inside 300 years.
Water use studies suggest that waddi trees are strongly drought adapted
and their scarcity at a landscape scale does not reflect confinement to
refugial habitat by water stress. There are indications that waddi trees
use water differently from potential competitors such as Grevillea
striata and this will be one of the areas of focus for continuing
research on the species.
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