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Floral Emblem of Tasmania Page 1 of 3 <br /> A Australian National r JM1� <br /> .'Australian(;overnment <br /> Department of the Emironmentand Ilerkage Botanic Gardens �f <br /> 4 <br /> Home>ANBG>Emblems <br /> Tasmanian Blue Gum <br /> Eucalyptus globulus <br /> Floral Emblem of Tasmania <br /> The Tasmanian Blue Gum, Eucalypts globulus, was <br /> proclaimed as the floral emblem of Tasmania on 27 <br /> November 1962. [Gazettal PDF, Official description, if, fy <br /> Official portrait <br /> Eucalyptus globulus was first collected on the south- <br /> east coast of Tasmania in 1792-93 by Jacques-Julien ' ` <br /> Houton_ de Labillardiere (1755-1834) and described by <br /> him in 1799. He was a distinguished French botanist <br /> who accompanied Bruny D'Entrecasteaux on the <br /> expedition in La Recherche and L'Esperance in 1791-94 in search of their missing compatriot, La <br /> Perouse. The two ships of the expedition led by La Perouse landed at Botany Bay on 26 January 1788. <br /> They departed six weeks later and forty years elapsed before their fate was established by the discovery <br /> of wreckage at Santa Cruz, north of the New Hebrides. Labillardiere was a keen collector of plants and <br /> animals and also recorded detailed accounts of the appearance and customs of the Australian <br /> Aboriginals he observed. His plant specimens are now housed in the Museum of Florence. <br /> Eucalyptus globulus now includes several subspecies of <br /> which E. globulus subsp. globulus is the Tasmanian <br /> emblem. The generic name Eucalyptus is derived from the <br /> Greek'eu', meaning 'well', and 'kalypto', meaning 'to cover, <br /> as with a lid', referring to the operculum, a cap-like structure <br /> which protects the stamens in the bud and is shed when the <br /> flower opens. The operculum is a distinguishing feature of <br /> all species of Eucalyptus. The specific name globulus, from <br /> the Latin meaning 'ball-like' or'spherical', refers to the <br /> shape of the fruit. The genus Eucalyptus numbers about <br /> 800 species which are widely distributed in Australia, with a <br /> f few species occurring in some of the islands to the north. It <br /> •s7 fix, <br /> belongs to the family Myrtaceae, which is widespread in <br /> Australia and tropical regions of the Americas. <br /> Tasmanian Blue Gum is a tall, straight tree growing to 70 <br /> metres in height and 2 metres in trunk diameter under <br /> favourable conditions. The rough, deeply furrowed, grey <br /> bark is persistent at the base of the trunk but above this <br /> level it is shed in strips leaving the branches and the greater <br /> length of the trunk smooth-barked. The broad juvenile <br /> leaves, borne in opposite pairs on square stems, are about <br /> 6 to 15 cm long and covered with a blue-grey, waxy bloom. <br /> This is the origin of the common name 'blue gum'. The <br /> mature leaves are narrow, sickle-shaped and dark shining <br /> green. They are arranged alternately on rounded stems and <br /> http://www.anbg.gov.au/emblems/tas.emblem.htmi 4/6/2006 <br />