Amyema quandang

Amyema quandang is a species of hemi-parasitic shrub which is widespread throughout the mainland of Australia, especially arid inland regions, sometimes referred to as the grey mistletoe.[4]

Amyema quandang
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Santalales
Family: Loranthaceae
Genus: Amyema
Species:
A. quandang
Binomial name
Amyema quandang
Varieties

A. quandang var. quandang[2]
A. quandang var. bancroftii (Bailey) Barlow[3]

Collections data for A. quandang from the Australasian Virtual Herbarium

Description

An aerial shrub, without conventional roots, which attaches to the stems of species of Acacia. The leaves are leathery and greyish, and lanceolate to broadly ovate.[1] Flowers are red, green and grey and appear sometime between April and October. The fruit is a fleshy drupe, between 6 and 10 millimetres long, which contains an oily seed.[5]

Ecology

The plant has a hemi-parasitic relationship with Acacia, it is recorded on: A. aneura, A. cambagei, A. papyrocarpa, A. omalophylla and A. dealbata.[1]

Two species of birds are noted for their interdependence, or mutualism, where they occur with A. quandang in the arid interior of Australia. Nectar from the species provides an important part of the diet of spiny-cheeked honeyeaters Acanthagenys rufogularis, who assist in its pollination. The fruit is consumed by mistletoebirds, Dicaeum hirundinaceum, who disperse the seed; the year round availability of the fruit is ignored by other frugivores.[6]

The hybridisation of this species with Amyema pendula, rare amongst Loranthaceae, has produced first generation hybrids.[7]

Taxonomy

Amyema quandang is member of Santalales, the mistletoe order, placed within the family Loranthaceae. The first publication of the species was made in a note by John Lindley in 1838,[8] describing the plant noted by Thomas Mitchell as growing on Santalum acuminatum, another hemiparasite known as quandong.

May 9. We moved to the pond above-mentioned, named Yambarenga ... and in some places I observed the Quandang bushes,* having their branches covered with a parasitical plant whose bright crimson flowers were very ornamental.**[8]

(*Footnote. Fusanus acuminatus.)
— Lindley, Mitchell, 1838[9]

The description in the genus Loranthus remained until Philippe Édouard Léon Van Tieghem transferred it to the genus Amyema in 1894.[10][11] The genus name is derived from Greek for 'without' and 'to instruct'.[12]

Two varieties of the species are described, Amyema quandang var. quandang and Amyema quandang var. bancroftii (F.M.Bailey) Barlow,[13] the latter being found in Queensland and New South Wales.[3]

Host plants

The following host plants are known:[14]

List of host plants

References

  1. "Amyema quandang (Lindl.) Tiegh". PlantNET - New South Wales Flora Online. Royal Botanic Gardens & Domain Trust.
  2. "Amyema quandang var. quandang (Lindl.) Tiegh". PlantNET - New South Wales Flora Online. Royal Botanic Gardens & Domain Trust.
  3. "Amyema quandang var. bancroftii (Lindl.) Tiegh". PlantNET - New South Wales Flora Online. Royal Botanic Gardens & Domain Trust.
  4. "19 Mistletoe Amyema (various species)". Aboriginal Plant Use in South-Eastern Australia. Australian National Herbarium. Archived from the original on 25 June 2009. Retrieved 2009-07-10.
  5. "Amyema quandang (Lindl.) Tiegh". FloraBase. Western Australian Government Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions.
  6. Reid, Nick (July 28, 2006). "Mutualistic interdependence between mistletoes (Amyema quandang), and spiny-cheeked honeyeaters and mistletoebirds in an arid woodland". Austral Ecology. Ecological Society of Australia. 15 (2): 175–190. doi:10.1111/j.1442-9993.1990.tb01526.x.
  7. DM Calder; FG Lennox; P Bernhardt (1982). "Natural hybridization between Amyema pendulum and Amyema quandang, Loranthaceae". Australian Journal of Botany. 30 (6): 625. doi:10.1071/BT9820625. ISSN 0067-1924. Wikidata Q57405840.
  8. [from Mitchell](**Footnote. Loranthus quandang, Lindley manuscripts; incanus, foliis oppositis lineari-oblongis obsolete triplinerviis obtusis, pedunculis axillaribus folio multo bevioribus apice divaricato-bifidis 6-floris, floribus pentameris aequalibus, petalis linearibus, antheris linearibus basi insertis. Next L. gaudichaudi.)
  9. Lindley, J (1838), Mitchell, T.L. (ed.), Three Expeditions into the Interior of Eastern Australia, vol. 2, p. 69, Wikidata Q6146213
  10. M. Ph. Van Tieghem (January 1894). "Sur Le Groupement Des Espèces En Genres Dans Les Loranthacées A Calice Dialysépale Et Anthéres Basifixes". Bulletin de la Société Botanique de France (in French). 41 (6): 507. doi:10.1080/00378941.1894.10831632. ISSN 0037-8941. Wikidata Q54801450.
  11. "Amyema quandang (Lindl.) Tiegh". Australian Plant Name Index (APNI), IBIS database. Centre for Plant Biodiversity Research, Australian Government.
  12. "Amyema". FloraBase. Western Australian Government Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions.
  13. Amyema quandang var. bancroftii (F.M.Bailey) Barlow. BA Barlow (1966). "A revision of the Loranthaceae of Australia and New Zealand". Australian Journal of Botany. 14 (3): 481, fig. 9 (map). doi:10.1071/BT9660421. ISSN 0067-1924. Wikidata Q54801356.
  14. Paul Owen Downey (1998). "An inventory of host species for each aerial mistletoe species (Loranthaceae and Viscaceae) in Australia" (PDF). Cunninghamia. 5 (3): 685–720. ISSN 0727-9620. Wikidata Q106567982.
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