Acacia harpophylla
Acacia harpophylla is an endemic species of Acacia in Australia. One finds it in the center and on the dimensions of the Queensland and in the north of the News-Wales-of-South until the 20me° of southern latitude. It can reach 25 meters in height. It has suckering roots what makes an invading species of it. The bark hard, is wrinkled, almost black. The sickle-shaped sheets, coriaces, waxing machines measure from 10 to 20 cm length for 7 to 20 mm broad. It forms vast forests on the clay soils.
Two species: Acacia harpophylla and Acacia cambagei forms wood sparse in the plains, the plates and the zones slightly undulating with the heavy and relatively fertile clay soils when precipitations reach between 300 and 700 mm per annum. In certain places, they are associated with other species such as Eucalyptus coolabah , Eucalyptus cambageana , Casuarina cristata and of many herbaceous plants.
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