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Acacia melanoxylon, commonly known as the Australian blackwood, is an Acacia species native to south-eastern Australia. The species is also known as blackwood , hickory , mudgerabah , Tasmanian blackwood , or blackwood acacia .
Acacia penninervis, commonly known as mountain hickory wattle, or blackwood, [3] is a perennial shrub or tree is an Acacia belonging to subgenus Phyllodineae, [4] that is native to eastern Australia. Description
Acacia mangium Acacia mearnsii , also known as Late Black Wattle and the species of tree that is known to be, commercially, the most important tannin producer in Southern Africa Acacia melanoxylon , a 'timber' tree that is commonly known as Australian Blackwood
This article is a list of Acacia species (sensu lato) that are known to contain psychoactive alkaloids, or are suspected of containing such alkaloids due to being psychoactive. The presence and constitution of alkaloids in nature can be highly variable, due to environmental and genetic factors.
Acacia argyrodendron, known colloquially as black gidyea or blackwood, [2] is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to Queensland. It is a tree with hard, furrowed bark, narrowly linear to elliptic phyllodes, golden yellow flowers arranged in racemes, and linear pods up to 120 mm (4.7 in) long.
Australian blackwood (Diospyros longibracteata), from Laos; Australian or Tasmanian, Paluma blackwood (Acacia melanoxylon), a tree of eastern Australia; Bombay, Malabar, Nilghiri or (East) Indian blackwood (Dalbergia latifolia), a timber tree of India; Burmese Blackwood (Dalbergia cultrata, Dalbergia oliveri), trees from South China, Southeast Asia
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The name "Blackwood" most likely comes from either the Acacia melanoxylon, also known as the Australian blackwood, which grows in the nearby Mount Lofty Ranges, or the Eucalyptus odorata, which grows in Blackwood and has dark bark.