Banksia menziesii, commonly known as firewood banksia, is a species of flowering plant in the family Proteaceae. It is a gnarled tree up to 10 m (33 ft) tall, or a lower spreading 1–3 m (3.3–9.8 ft) shrub in the more northern parts of its range. The serrated leaves are dull green with new growth a paler grey green. The prominent autumn and winter inflorescences are often two-coloured red or pink and yellow, and their colour has given rise to more unusual common names such as port wine banksia and strawberry banksia. Yellow blooms are rarely seen.
First described by the botanist Robert Brown in the early 19th century, no separate varieties of Banksia menziesii are recognised. It is found in Western Australia, from the Perth (32° S) region north to the Murchison River (27° S), and generally grows on sandy soils, in scrubland or low woodland. Banksia menziesii provides food for a wide array of invertebrate and vertebrate animals; birds and in particular honeyeaters are prominent visitors. A relatively hardy plant, Banksia menziesii is commonly seen in gardens, nature strips and parks in Australian urban areas with Mediterranean climates, but its sensitivity to dieback from the soil-borne water mould Phytophthora cinnamomi makes it short-lived in places with humid summers, such as Sydney. Banksia menziesii is widely used in the cut flower industry both in Australia and overseas.
Description
Banksia menziesii grows either as a gnarled tree to 10 m (33 ft), or a lower spreading 1–3 metres (3.3–9.8 ft) shrub, generally encountered at its northern limits in the vicinity of Eneabba-Mount Adams; thus, it declines steadily in size as the climate becomes warmer and drier further north.[2] In the shrub form, several stems arise from the woody base known as the lignotuber. The trunk is greyish, sometimes with shades of brown or pink, and the 2–3 cm (0.8–1.2 in) thick rough bark breaks away easily. The new growth is covered in fine brownish hair, which wears away after two or three years, leaving smooth stems and leaves.[3] Stems that will bear flower spikes the following year are generally thicker and longer.[4] Oblong in shape and somewhat truncate at the tips, the leaves are grey-green in colour, 8–25 cm (3.1–9.8 in) long and up to 4 cm (1.6 in) wide. The new leaves are paler and finely downy. The leaf margins are serrated with many small 1–2 mm long triangular teeth. The lower surface of the leaf has a midrib covered in fine pale brown hair.[3]
Flowering occurs in autumn and winter, peaking from May to July. Overall the inflorescences, or flower spikes, take around eight months to fully develop from the first microscopic changes in late spring.[5] Ovoid to cylindrical in shape, the flower spikes can be up to 7–8 cm (2.8–3.1 in) wide and 4–12 cm (1.6–4.7 in) high.[3] They are composed of numerous individual flowers; one field study south of Perth recorded an average of 1043 per flower spike,[6] while another on plants in cultivation in South Australia recorded an average of 720.[7]B. menziesii has more flower colour variants than any other Banksia species, with flower spikes occurring in a wide range of pinks, as well as chocolate, bronze, yellow and white, and greenish variants. They are particularly striking closeup but can look indistinct from a distance. They are most attractive in late bud, the styles contrasting well to the body of the inflorescence, the whole looking like a red- or pink-and white vertical candy striped bloom. The inflorescences are generally a deeper red after colder weather and further into the winter.[8]Anthocyanin pigments are responsible for the red and pink shades in the flowers.[9]
Old flowers usually fall off the spikes quickly, with up to 25 large beaked follicles developing. Mottled dark brown and grey in colour, these can be prominent and quite attractively patterned when newly developed. Oval shaped, they are 2.5–3.5 cm (1.0–1.4 in) long by 1–1.5 cm (0.4–0.6 in) high and 1–1.5 cm (0.4–0.6 in) wide.[3] Overall, only a small fraction of flowers develop into follicles; the proportion is as low as one in a thousand.[10] The plant is dependent on fire to reproduce as the follicles only open after being burnt, each one producing one or two viable wedge-shaped (cuneate) seeds, on either side of a woody separator.[3] The colour and level of pigmentation in the seeds foreshadows the eventual colour of the inflorescences. Kevin Collins of the Banksia Farm recalled that for many years pale seeds were discarded by seed collectors, who thought they were infertile. Later, he learnt that pale seeds yielded yellow-coloured blooms, dark grey the usual red-coloured, and black a distinctive bronze-coloured bloom.[11]
Seedlings have obovatecotyledons 1–1.4 cm (0.4–0.6 in) long by 1–1.5 cm (0.4–0.6 in) wide, and the leaves that develop immediately afterward are crowded and very hairy. They have serrate margins.[3] Evidence of thickening to form a future lignotuber, as well as minute buds, has been detected from the bases of seedlings at five months of age.[12]
The common name of firewood banksia was a result of its quick-burning properties.[13] Other names recorded include Menzies banksia,[14] firewheel banksia, port wine banksia, flame banksia, and in the cut flower industry, strawberry banksia and raspberry frost banksia.[15] The Beeloo WhadjukNoongar people of the Perth region knew it as the Mungyt.[16] Despite its variation across its range, George noted that B. menziesii was a clearly defined species, and no formal division into subspecies was warranted.[3]
In 1891, Otto Kuntze, in his Revisio Generum Plantarum, rejected the generic name BanksiaL.f., on the grounds that the name Banksia had previously been published in 1776 as BanksiaJ.R.Forst & G.Forst, referring to the genus now known as Pimelea. Kuntze proposed Sirmuellera as an alternative, referring to this species as Sirmuellera menziesii.[23] This application of the principle of priority was largely ignored by Kuntze's contemporaries,[24] and Banksia L.f. was formally conserved and Sirmuellera rejected in 1940.[25]
Current placement
Alex George published a new taxonomic arrangement of Banksia in his classic 1981 monograph The genus Banksia L.f. (Proteaceae).[20] Endlicher's Eubanksia became B. subg. Banksia, and was divided into three sections. B. menziesii was placed in B. sect. Banksia, and this was further divided into nine series, with B. menziesii placed in B. ser. Banksia.
He thought its closest relatives to be Banksia speciosa and B. baxteri, and that it also formed a link with eastern species, particularly Banksia serrata. Since Brown's original publication had treated all of Fraser's specimens as syntypes for the species, George also chose a lectotype, selecting a tree that Fraser had received from Macleay in May 1828.[3]
B. menziesii's inflorescences resemble those of no other banksia; its closest relatives were felt by George to be B. speciosa (showy banksia) and B. baxteri (bird's nest banksia), which differs from B. menziesii in having yellow flowers, and leaves with deep triangular lobes.[27] In 2002, a molecular study by Austin Mast showed its closest relatives to be the members of the series Crocinae.[28]
In 2005, Mast, Eric Jones and Shawn Havery published the results of their cladistic analyses of DNA sequence data for Banksia. They inferred a phylogeny greatly different from the accepted taxonomic arrangement, including finding Banksia to be paraphyletic with respect to Dryandra.[29] A new taxonomic arrangement was not published at the time, but early in 2007 Mast and Thiele initiated a rearrangement by transferring Dryandra to Banksia, and publishing B. subg. Spathulatae for the species having spoon-shaped cotyledons; in this way they also redefined the autonymB. subg. Banksia. They foreshadowed publishing a full arrangement once DNA sampling of Dryandra was complete. In the meantime, if Mast and Thiele's nomenclatural changes are taken as an interim arrangement, then B. menziesii is placed in B. subg. Banksia.[30]
As B. menziesii is not similar to any other Banksia, hybrids are unlikely to occur. The only reported hybrid is a sterile hybrid with B. hookeriana (Hooker's banksia), found north of Badgingarra by Greg Keighery.[31] Manual cross-fertilisation with B. attenuata has resulted in germination, indicating that these two species are genetically compatible, but natural hybrids are extremely unlikely because the two species flower at different times.[32]
Distribution and habitat
Banksia menziesii grows primarily in deep sandy soils of the Swan Coastal Plain and Geraldton Sandplains, extending from Waroona in the south to Kalbarri in the north.[31] However, it is uncommon south of Mandurah.[33] It is generally limited to the east by the heavy soils of the Darling Scarp, but does grow on isolated patches of sand in the Jarrah Forest and Avon Wheatbelt regions, such as occur near Beverley, Toodyay and Wongan Hills. The easternmost known occurrence is a specimen collected by Roger Hnatiuk in 1979 from north-east of Brookton, about 125 km (78 mi) from the coast.[31] Much of its range on the Swan Coastal Plain coincides with Perth's expanding metropolitan area, and much habitat has been lost to clearing.[34]
Together with B. attenuata (candlestick banksia), B. menziesii is a dominant component in a number of widespread vegetation complexes of the Swan Coastal Plain, including Banksia low woodland and Jarrah-Banksia woodland.[35] These complexes only occur on deep, well-draining sand; in shallower, seasonally wet soils, B. menziesii and B. attenuata give way to other Banksia species, such as B. littoralis (swamp banksia) or B. telmatiaea (swamp fox banksia).[32] On the Geraldton Sandplains to the north, B. menziesii usually occurs as a shrub or small tree emergent above low heath.[31]
Ecology
Like many members of the family Proteaceae, Banksia menziesii is largely self-incompatible; that is, inflorescences require pollinators to be fertilised and produce seed. One mechanism by which the species promotes cross-pollination with other plants is protandry, whereby the male parts release pollen that becomes non-viable before the female parts become receptive on the same flower spike.[36] The individual flowers are uniform, and it is unclear why so few go on to develop follicles.[7] Published in 1988, a field study conducted in banksia woodland near Perth noted that anthesis occurred on an inflorescence at an average rate of 40 to 60 florets opening per day, although this varied widely between different flowerheads. Foraging by honeyeaters would cause the florets to open, but bees would not.[37]
Twenty-one species from several orders of slime molds (myxomycetes) have been isolated from the bark of Banksia menziesii. Over half (13) were from the order Stemonitales, and Echinosteliales and Liceales were also common. The abundance of the first two orders may be due to the acidity of the bark. Another order, the Physarales, was unusually rare—other studies have demonstrated that the order is typically abundant on the bark of various species of tree around the world.[41]
Banksia menziesii regenerates after bushfire by resprouting from its woody lignotuber, or from epicormic buds on the trunk.[31] It is generally only weakly serotinous in the southern part of its range, that is, it lacks a canopy seed bank as follicles on old flower spikes in the canopy release their seed after two years, but as populations move north they retain more seed. Lower canopies and drier climates predispose to hotter fires that are more likely to kill plants and effect seed release, and thus facilitate seedling recruitment.[2]
All banksias have developed proteoid or cluster roots in response to the nutrient poor conditions of Australian soils (particularly lacking in phosphorus).[42] The plant develops masses of fine lateral roots that form a mat-like structure underneath the soil surface, which enable it to extract nutrients as efficiently as possible out of the soil. A study of three co-occurring species in banksia woodland in southwestern Australia—Banksia menziesii, B. attenuata and B. ilicifolia—found that all three develop fresh roots in September after winter rainfall, and that the bacterial populations associated with the root systems of B. menziesii differ from the other two, and that they also change depending on the age of the roots.[43]
Along with Banksia attenuata, Banksia menziesii is a facultative phreatophyte. The two species are less strictly tied to the water table and hence able to grow in a wider variety of places within banksia woodland habitat around Perth than the co-occurring Banksia ilicifolia and Banksia littoralis.[44] Recent falls of the water table on the Swan Coastal Plain from use of the Gnangara Mound aquifer for Perth's water supply as well as years of below average rainfall have caused a drop in the population and vigour of Banksia menziesii since the mid-1960s.[45] A 2009 Spanish study showed Banksia menziesii seedlings to be moderately sensitive to salinity.[46] It is also sensitive to sulfur dioxide.[47] A 1994 study by Byron Lamont and colleagues from Curtin University found that Banksia menziesii plants within 50 metres (160 feet) of road verges had crowns two and a half times bigger, and set three times as many seeds as plants further away from the road, and that this was likely due to increased availability of nutrients and water from runoff.[48]
Cultivation
Banksia menziesii has several horticultural features including patterned buds and follicles, attractive pinkish new growth, and showy flowerheads.[8] A dwarf form is commonly sold in nurseries.[49] Byron Lamont has observed that dwarf plants may grow into taller single-trunked plants in cultivation.[48]
The plant is fairly easy to grow in a Mediterranean climate with good drainage and a light (sandy) soil. However, with medium to high susceptibility to Phytophthora cinnamomi dieback,[50] it is unreliable in conditions that favour the growth of the soil-borne water mould, such as summer humidity or poor drainage.[8] The use of phosphite fungicides does reduce the spread of Phytophthora.[51] It generally does poorly in eastern Australia, although it is grown commercially in southeastern South Australia as a cut flower crop. It is also grown in California and Hawaii.[8]
Seeds do not require any treatment prior to planting, and take 26 to 40 days to germinate.[52] Seeds that grow into yellow-flowered plants are pale and unpigmented, while future bronze- and red-flowered plants are dark greyish and black respectively.[11] It generally takes about five to seven years to flower from seed. The plant favours sandy well-drained soils and a sunny position and can be heavily pruned if necessary, as new growth can arise from the lignotuber. Although it is readily propagated by seed,[8] experiments with in vitro propagation found Banksia menziesii to be more difficult than other species trialled.[53]
Art and culture
The nectar of Banksia menziesii was used in a drink by the Beeloo Whadjug Nyoongar, who were also called the Mungyt people. Along with beverages from other species, it was drunk at special sweet water festivals.[16]Banksia menziesii was the subject of a book by botanical artist Philippa Nikulinsky, which showed the progress of an inflorescence from bud through flowering to fruiting and seed release over 22 watercolour plates.[54] Noted wildflower artist Ellis Rowan also painted it.[55] It was one of several wildflowers depicted on a series of plates produced by the British pottery firm Wedgwood in the early 1990s.[54]
References
^"Banksia menziesii". Australian Plant Name Index (APNI), IBIS database. Canberra, Australian Capital Territory: Centre for Plant Biodiversity Research, Australian Government. Retrieved 26 November 2012.
^Fuss, A. M.; Pattison, S. J.; Aspinall, D.; Sedgley, M. (1992). "Shoot growth in relation to cut flower production of Banksia coccinea R.Br. and B. menziesii R.Br. (Proteaceae)". Scientia Horticulturae. 49 (3–4): 323–34. doi:10.1016/0304-4238(92)90168-C.
^Fuss, A. M.; Sedgley, M. (1990). "Floral initiation and development in relation to the time of flowering in Banksia coccinea R.Br. and B. menziesii R.Br. (Proteaceae)". Australian Journal of Botany. 38 (5): 487–500. doi:10.1071/BT9900487.
^ abWhelan, Robert J.; Burbidge, Allan H. (1980). "Flowering phenology, seed set and bird pollination of five Western Australian Banksia species". Austral Ecology. 5 (1): 1–7. doi:10.1111/j.1442-9993.1980.tb01225.x.
^ abClifford, S. C.; Sedgley, M. (1993). "Pistil structure of Banksia menziesii R.Br. (Proteaceae) in relation to fertility". Australian Journal of Botany. 41 (4–5): 481–90. doi:10.1071/BT9930481.
^Asenstorfer, Robert E.; Morgan, Anne L.; Hayasaka, Yoji; Sedgely, Margaret; Jones, Graham P. (2003). "Purification of anthocyanins from species of Banksia and Acacia using high-voltage paper electrophoresis". Phytochemical Analysis. 14 (3): 150–54. doi:10.1002/pca.696. PMID12793461.
^Young, Andrew Graham; Clarke, Geoffrey Maurice (2000). Genetics, demography and viability of fragmented populations. Cambridge University Press. p. 256. ISBN0-521-79421-8.
^ abCollins, Kevin (2004). "Seed variation in Banksia menziesii". Banksia Study Group Newsletter. 6 (1). ASGAP: 1. ISSN1444-285X.
^"Firewood Banksia". Perth Zoo website. South Perth, WA: Government of Western Australia. 28 September 2006. Archived from the original on 9 December 2007. Retrieved 27 April 2010.
^Holliday, Ivan; Watton, Geoffrey (2008) [1977]. Banksias: A Field and Garden Guide (3rd ed.). Adelaide, South Australia: Australian Plants Society (SA Region). pp. 106–07. ISBN978-0-9803013-1-1.
^Brown, Steven W. (October 2007). "Cut Flower of the Month: Banksia"(PDF). Super Floral Retailing magazine website. Topeka, Kansas: Florists' Review Enterprises. Archived from the original(PDF) on 16 July 2011. Retrieved 27 April 2010.
^ abHill, Alan L. (8–11 October 2006). Sharing Sweet Water: Culture and the Wise Use of Perth's Wetlands(PDF). 1st Australian National Hydropolis Conference. Burswood Entertainment Complex, Perth, Western Australia: Stormwater Industry Association. Archived from the original(PDF) on 19 February 2011. Retrieved 22 May 2010.
^Hansen, V.; Horsfall, J. (2016). Noongar Bush Medicine Medicinal Plants of the South-west of Western Australia. Crawley, WA: UWA Publishing. p. 68. ISBN9781742589060.
^ abGeorge, Alex S. (1981). "The genus Banksia L.f. – A case history in Australian botany". History in the Service of Systematics: 53–59.
^Meissner, Carl (1856). "Proteaceae". In A. P. de Candolle (ed.). Prodromus systematis naturalis regni vegetabilis, pars decima quarta (in Latin). Paris: Sumptibus Victoris Masson.
^Mast, Austin R.; Jones, Eric H.; Havery, Shawn P. (2005). "An assessment of old and new DNA sequence evidence for the paraphyly of Banksia with respect to Dryandra (Proteaceae)". Australian Systematic Botany. 18 (1). CSIRO Publishing / Australian Systematic Botany Society: 75–88. doi:10.1071/SB04015.
^ abLewis, Jeffrey; Bell, David T. (1981). "Reproductive isolation of co-occurring Banksia species at the Yule Brook Botany Reserve, Western Australia". Australian Journal of Botany. 29 (6): 665–74. doi:10.1071/BT9810665.
^Lamont, Byron B. (1996). "Conservation biology of banksias in southwestern Australia". In S. D. Hopper; M. Harvey; J. Chappill; A. S. George (eds.). Gondwanan Heritage: Past, Present and Future of the Western Australian Biota. Chipping Norton: Surrey Beatty. pp. 292–98. ISBN0-949324-66-3.
^Ramsey, M. W.; Vaughton, Glenda (1991). "Self-incompatibility, protandry, pollen production and pollen longevity in Banksia menziesii". Australian Journal of Botany. 39 (5): 497–504. doi:10.1071/BT9910497.
^Ramsey, M. W. (1988). "Floret opening in Banksia menziesii R.Br.; the importance of nectarivorous birds". Australian Journal of Botany. 36 (2): 225–32. doi:10.1071/BT9880225.
^Jordan, C. C.; Brims, M. H.; Speijers, E. J.; Davison, E. M. (2006). "Myxomycetes on the bark of Banksia attenuata and B. menziesii (Proteaceae)". Australian Journal of Botany. 54 (4): 357–65. doi:10.1071/BT05079.
^Beadle, N.C. (1968). "Some aspects of the ecology and physiology of Australian xeromorphic plants". Aust. J. Sci. 30: 348–355.
^Marschner, Petra; Grierson, Pauline F.; Rengel, Zed (2006). "Microbial community composition and functioning in the rhizosphere of three Banksia species in native woodland in Western Australia". Applied Soil Ecology. 28 (3): 191–201. doi:10.1016/j.apsoil.2004.09.001.
^Froend, R. H.; Drake, P. L. (2006). "Defining phreatophyte response to reduced water availability: preliminary investigations on the use of xylem cavitation vulnerability in Banksia woodland species". Australian Journal of Botany. 54 (2): 173–79. doi:10.1071/BT05081.
^Groom, P. K.; Froend, R. H.; Mattiske, E. M.; Gurner, R. P. (2001). "Long-term changes in vigour and distribution of Banksia and Melaleuca overstorey species on the Swan Coastal Plain". Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia. 84: 63–69.
^Rodríguez-Pérez, J.A. (2009). "Effect of salinity on seedling emergence of seven Banksia species cultivated for cut flower and foliage". Journal of Plant Nutrition. 32 (9): 1540–50. doi:10.1080/01904160903093844. S2CID84912264.
^ abLamont, Byron B.; Whitten, Victoria A.; Witkowski, E. T. F.; Rees, Rosemarie G.; Enright, Neal J. (1994). "Regional and Local (Road Verge) Effects on Size and Fecundity in Banksia menziesii". Australian Journal of Ecology. 19 (2): 197–205. doi:10.1111/j.1442-9993.1994.tb00483.x.
^Walters, Brian (November 2007). "Banksia menziesii". Australian Native Plants Society (Australia). Archived from the original on 8 May 2008. Retrieved 2 May 2010.
^McCredie, T. A.; Dixon, K. W.; Sivasithamparam, K. (1985). "Variability in the resistance of Banksia L.f. species to Phytophthora cinnamomi Rands". Australian Journal of Botany. 33 (6): 629–37. doi:10.1071/BT9850629.
^Shearer, B. L.; Crane, C. E.; Fairman, R. G. (2004). "Phosphite reduces disease extension of a Phytophthora cinnamomi front in Banksia woodland, even after fire". Australasian Plant Pathology. 33 (2): 249–254. doi:10.1071/AP04002. S2CID21296178.
^Sweedman, Luke; Merritt, David, eds. (2006). Australian seeds: a guide to their collection, identification and biology. CSIRO Publishing. p. 203. ISBN0-643-09298-6.
^Tynan, K. M.; Scott, E. S.; Sedgley, M. (2000). "Banksia propagation. In-vitro multiplication of Banksia species". Australian Plants. 21 (166): 79–82.
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Halaman ini berisi artikel tentang franchise permainan video. Untuk permainan pertama dalam seri ini, lihat The Idolmaster (permainan video). The IdolmasterAliranPermainan simulasi kehidupan, Permainan ritmePengembangCygamesMetroBandai Namco GamesPenerbitBandai Namco GamesPelantarAndroid, Feature phone (au, NTT DoCoMo, SoftBank), iOS, Namco System 246 (arcade system board), Nintendo DS, PlayStation Portable, PlayStation Vita, PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Xbox 360Pelantar pertamaNamco System ...
Brigada del Mártir Nubar Ozanyan en armenio: Նահատակ Նուպար Օզանեան Գումարտակen árabe: طابور الشهيد نوبار اوزانيانen kurdo: Tabura Şehid Nubar Ozanyan Participante en la Guerra Civil Siria, Conflicto en el Kurdistán sirio, Revolución de Rojava Emblema de la Brigada Armenia Nubar Ozanyan.Actividad 24 de abril de 2019 – presenteIdeología Nacionalismo armenio[1] Confederalismo democrático[2]Antiimperialismo[3]R...
Pour les articles homonymes, voir Plužine (homonymie). Cet article est une ébauche concernant une localité monténégrine. Vous pouvez partager vos connaissances en l’améliorant (comment ?) selon les recommandations des projets correspondants. Plužine (sr) Плужине Héraldique Administration Pays Monténégro Municipalité Plužine Maire Mijuško Bajagić (SNP) Code postal 81435 Indicatif téléphonique international +(382) Indicatif téléphonique local 83 Immatriculation ...