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Duboisia myoporoides, or corkwood, is a shrub or tree native to high-rainfall areas on the margins of rainforest in eastern Australia. It has a thick and corky bark. [1] The leaves are obovate to elliptic in shape, 4–15 cm long and 1–4 cm wide. The small white flowers are produced in clusters.
Endiandra sieberi, known as the corkwood is a rainforest tree growing in eastern Australia. ... Rainforest Trees of Mainland South-eastern Australia, ...
Duboisia (commonly called corkwood tree) [citation needed] is a genus of small perennial shrubs and trees that grow up to 14 metres (46 feet) tall, with extremely light wood and a thick corky bark. There are four species; all occur in Australia, and one also occurs in New Caledonia. The alternate, glabrous leaves are narrow and elliptical.
Ackama paniculosa, synonym Caldcluvia paniculosa, known as the soft corkwood, is a rainforest tree of eastern Australia. It occurs from Ourimbah, Central Coast (New South Wales) at 33° S to Eungella National Park (20° S) in tropical Queensland. Other common names include corkwood, rose-leaf marara, brown alder and sugarbark.
Commiphora angolensis (sand corkwood), a shrub mainly in Angola and Namibia; Commiphora saxicola (rock corkwood), a shrub endemic to Namibia; Duboisia, a genus with species in Australia; Endiandra sieberi, a corkwood from Australia in the laurel family; Entelea arborescens, found in New Zealand; Erythrina vespertilio (grey corkwood), Australia
Hakea divaricata, commonly known as needlewood, [2] corkbark tree [3] or fork-leaved corkwood, [4] is a tree or shrub in the family Proteaceae native to an area in central Australia. A slow growing species with up to 120 showy cream to greenish-yellow flowers in long racemes from June to November.
Native to Australia, the trees, which are commonly referred to as red gum or bloodwood trees (for obvious reasons), exhibit a shockingly human characteristic: they "bleed" when they're cut into ...
Erythrina vespertilio is a tree native to north and north-east Australia. Its common names are grey corkwood, bat's wing coral tree, [1] yulbah [2] and the more ambiguous "bean tree". In the Western Desert language it is known as ininti and the in Arrernte and Anmatyerr it is known as atywerety.