Saturday, June 12, 2010

Belah

Casuarina cristata
Family: CASUARINACEAE
The wind’s song at Irongate last weekend was lovely. The sound of the wind in the she-oaks is a quintessentially Australian sound, part of the atmosphere of the bush. This Irongate tree is a belah, one of the toughest and most drought-hardy of she-oak species.
The green parts of Casuarinas are neither leaves nor needles, but little green branchlets. You'll notice that they have small joints along their length. Break one apart by pulling both ends, and you will see tiny “teeth” on one of the broken ends. These are all that has been left after evolution has dealt with the “leaf problem”.
The problem, for a tree which wants to survive in a very climate, is that leaves lose water. She-oaks have adapted to drought by the simple expedient of getting rid of them.
They still need to photosynthesise, however. This job, making food out of the carbon in the air, is usually done by leaves, which are green because they contain chlorophyll, a substance essential for the process.
So the branchlets have taken over the chlorophyll, and the job and the job of making food for the tree.
Belahs are dioecious. In the season, the tiny male flowers encrust the male trees with old gold. The reddish female flowers (and these seed capsules) form only on female trees. They grow inside the canopy on the branches.
Belahs tolerate a wide soil pH range, and are the she-oak best suited to the alkaline black soils of the Darling Downs. They are among the faster-growing of our she-oaks, and make good windbreaks. When young, their foliage reaches to the ground, but for a long-term windbreak they should be planted with lower-growing bushy species, as they do eventually develop tall trunks.


Casuarinas and Allocasuarinas
These are all trees of a very ancient type.
Apart from the conifers, they are the only native Australian trees to be wind-pollinated. (Wind-pollination was the first kind of pollination to evolve. Fancy techniques using insects came later, during the age of the dinosaurs.)
These wonderful trees grow very well in poor soils because they can make their own fertilisers - and they do it better if you never fertilise them. Like legumes, they can develop nitrogen-fixing roots. Their ability to do it depends on their roots finding the right soil bacteria, so the plants grow better if the seedlings are planted in a little “mother soil”, from around the roots of established trees, which contains the right bacteria to get them started.
Casuarinas go one better than legumes, however. They can also access help from mycorrhizal fungi, which co-operate with the tree to grow a dense mat of extra root-like structures. These occur seasonally, and resemble the famous “proteoid roots” of Grevilleas and their relatives. They help the tree with the uptake of phosphorus and minerals - but can result in poisoning of a tree if it has these good fungal connections is then fed a high phosphorus fertiliser.
Bandicoots love to eat these particularly nutritious fungi, and fungus spores are spread via their digestive systems, to the great benefit of the soil’s health. Any sturdy plant community has a “wood wide web” of these fungi. It’s good reason for encouraging bandicoots in our gardens.
Casuarinas are all excellent fuelwood trees, being amongst the hottest-burning woods in the world. They were much used by bakers in the early days of white settlement, so tend to have been eliminated from around all our little towns.
Belahs are capable of reaching a trunk diameter of 1m, but trees this size are rarely seen nowadays.
Our local she-oak species are:
River she-oak, Casuarina cunninghamiana;
Forest she-oak, Allocasuarina torulosa; and the
Belah, above.
Perhaps we can also include the bulloak, Allocasuarina luehmannii, as a “local” - though it rarely occurs on basalt soil, which is the topic of this blog. (Where we do see it on the basalt soil, there is always a strong admixture of sand.)
(For more on Casuarinas see my blog June 2008, and the article above.)

8 comments:

Unknown said...

What is the lifespan of a Belah tree? We have them on our property at Blackbutt.

Patricia Gardner said...

Hi Cary.
As with many Australian trees the lifespan is not fully studied.Our trees are not like the trees of Europe and north America, which make neat annual growth rings that can be easily counted. It's the climate that makes the difference. We don't have a neat summer "growing season" (light coloured ring) and winter "rest season" (dark ring) every year, as they do.
In a bad year our trees might make no growth rings at all, and in a year with several distinct wet periods there could be as many as four rings created, each with darker "rest period" rings between them.
However, you could expect belahs to be longer-lived than the smaller coastal Casuarinas (some of which are known to live for about 60 years). I imagine you would be looking at a 100-year minimum, and probably quite a bit longer.
Trish

Alan Blacksmith said...

Very interesting info on the old favourite The Belah.
I was given seed pod off a Belah tree & asked if I could grow the tree from seed. I have grow Bottle & Brigalow trees from seed but not Belah. Do you have any info on the growing of these trees.
Cheers
Alan

Patricia Gardner said...

Good to hear from you, Alan. The tree is an old favourite of mine, too - ever since the age when I finally sorted out the belahs from the galahs. Do you remember the lovely stand by the railway shed just north of Jondaryan, where great heaps of coal now sit?
They are quite easy to grow from seed. As with anything else, you only bury them to the depth of the diameter of the seed. This means they risk drying out so you need to pay attention to regular watering till they germinate. You might want to wait till spring when germination will be quicker. They also seem to damp off, so you need a well-drained potting mix, and cutting down the water to the bare necessity once they are high enough to have produced a decent bit of root. The root is usually longer than the green shoot, at that stage.
Best of luck.
Trish

Unknown said...

Hi Trish. I am wondering about groundwater usage or restoration by Belah. What happens with the Belah roots in heavy rain as we have hills and a lot of runoff creating gully rakers. I want old world native trees and grasses that capture the runoff (I already have swales on the less steep area) and prevent erosion.

Patricia Gardner said...

I am wondering about your expression "old world native trees". Belah is a native of Australia, which is not usually regarded as an "old world" country. Most writers of comments to this blog are Australian. Are you writing from somewhere else in the world?
Trish

Anonymous said...

Alan how long after collecting Brigalow seeds do they remain viable.
As a kid living on a farm at Brigalow I transplanted some seedlings that was about 1970 they are still around the cook pen at Long Pocket.

Patricia Gardner said...

Hi Alan.
Isn't it rewarding, when you know that trees you caused to grow are still around. I understand that brigalow have a long lifespan, so hopefully those trees will outlive you - and maybe your descendants as well. I don't think their actual lifespan is known but could well be over 100 years. Maybe several hundred?
Brigalow (Acacia harpophylla) seed has the reputation of being short-lived, so is said to be best planted as soon as possible after collection. This produces excellent results. I don't know how long they keep if not planted, but it is always worth trying old seed. There might be a few still viable. They are also, unlike most wattles, destroyed by heat, so you don't use the usual wattle propagation method of pouring boiling water on them before planting. They should be planted with no pre-paration.
Trish