Blog icon

By Thea Williams 27 March 2018 3 min read

A desert ghost gum (Corymbia candida on the eastern edge of the Pilbara, about 75km east of Newman. Desert ghost gums occur throughout the Pilbara and south into the goldfields region of WA. Image: TERN Ecosystem Surveillance

This blog first appeared on CSIROscope on National Eucalypt Day - enjoy the video at the end.

THEY might have lucked out in the stakes to win the tag as Australia’s floral emblem, in favour of the showy wattle. But eucalypts do have their own national day - March 23. And for good reason. Eucalypts say a lot about what makes the Australian continent unique.

Here are five things you might not know about eucalypts and how the define Australia:

  1. Eucalypts are the tallest flowering plant on Earth. The giant of them all is the Eucalyptus regnans, in Tasmania, with the current tallest measuring at nearly 100m and historical record suggesting the tallest was cut down in Victoria at 114m in 1880.Of the almost 900 eucalypt varieties, 894 are native to Australia. (There’s a small footnote here: Australia might feel defined by them but the oldest scientifically identified fossil was found in South America – in Patagonia. In research from Cornell University published in 2011, fossils of leaves, flowers, fruits and buds were identified as Eucalyptus dating to 51.9 million years ago – the only conclusive identification of naturally occurring Eucalypts outside of Australasia.) Investigate different varieties by exploring our interactive key to Australian species and subspecies of eucalypts: https://www.csiro.au/en/Research/Collections/ANH/Our-research/Plant-taxonomy-and-evolution/Identifying-eucalypts-made-easy

Eucalyptus obliqua forest in the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area in south west Tasmania. The trees are aged between 77 and >250 years-old. Image: TERN.

2. Eucalypts give Australia much of its colour and smell. They are one of the highest emitters of biogenic volatile organic compounds, BVOCs. It’s a genus that covers most of south-eastern Australia and because of this, the region is considered a global hotspot for BVOCs. BVOCs are also what gives the Blue Mountains the blue haze - caused by a chemical reaction in the atmosphere, driven by a compound called isoprene. Isoprene is one of scores of compounds in the atmosphere that contribute to air pollution and the creation of particles that are harmful to our health.

3. Eucalypts demonstrate what makes Australian environments efficient. Those that grow up to 20 m tall can do so on as little as 250 mm mean annual rainfall, where similar Mediterranean climates on other continents would only support shrub lands. Conversely, in the Top End of north Australia, the eucalypts rarely get that tall, despite receiving five times the rainfall. This rain all comes in the ‘big wet’ and followed by the dry season. Eucalypt woodlands dominate the top third of Australia, growing on the ancient, infertile sand-sheets and coping with annual drought and frequent fires. Northern eucalypts also largely reproduce via re-sprouts, with less than 1 per cent regeneration by seed.

4. Eucalypts are the great survivors. In the Murray Mallee region bordering around South Australia, Victoria and New South Wales, the eucalypt mallee trees colonised and stabilised the great sand dunes formed during the dry period of the last ice age 11,000 years ago. These short, multi-stemmed trees are adapted to low rainfall (< 240 mm per year) and they survive the bushfires that sweep the Mallee every 25 to 30 years. They survive because they form a large lignotuber (the “mallee root”) just below the ground. The root is often several hundreds of years old – and can be aged to 900 years. When a fire burns the top of the tree, new stems grow from the old protected root and a new mallee tree springs up within a few months.

5. Eucalypts are the greatest recyclers of CO₂ and key to how this continent responds to greenhouse gas emissions. TERN, Australia’s land ecosystem observatory, has built a network of monitoring sites around Australia that continuously measures the exchanges (fluxes) of carbon dioxide, water vapour and energy between the terrestrial ecosystem and atmosphere. The Great Western Woodlands is the world’s most extensive area of temperate woodland, covering three times the area of Tasmania. An OzFlux Tower constructed in the woodlands at a place called Credo monitors these trees which live life on the edge. The data collected at the site allows scientists to detect the trees’ responses to environmental change and understand what this means for the future.

You can find out more about how TERN, CSIRO and its partners are watching over our incredible and valuable eucalypt ecosystems in a special National Eucalypt Day video :


Read more about TERN.

Contact us

Find out how we can help you and your business. Get in touch using the form below and our experts will get in contact soon!

CSIRO will handle your personal information in accordance with the Privacy Act 1988 (Cth) and our Privacy Policy.


First name must be filled in

Surname must be filled in

I am representing *

Please choose an option

Please provide a subject for the enquriy

0 / 100

We'll need to know what you want to contact us about so we can give you an answer

0 / 1900

You shouldn't be able to see this field. Please try again and leave the field blank.