Securing Rare Seed from Melaleuca triumphalis

The Australian Seed Bank Partnership headed bush to add the rare Melaleuca triumphalis to a valuable conservation collection

By Australian Seed Bank Partnership

George Brown Darwin Botanic Gardens

Baron Ferdinand von Mueller, silver albumen photograph, c. 1867 (1867) by State Library of Victoria and John Botterill.Public Record Office Victoria (State Archives of Victoria, Australia)

Step back in time

The year is 1855 and botanist Ferdinand von Mueller has just set off to explore the Northern Territory. The group of 18 men, led by Sir Augustus Charles Gregory, sailed from Moreton Bay in southern Queensland around the top of Australia to the Victoria River estuary.

The Australian exploring expedition travelling through scrub (from the Illustrated London News 1879) (1876) by Jesse YoungNational Portrait Gallery

19th century expedition

They followed the Victoria River until it disappeared into the desert. Traipsing almost 500 kilometres along the river they mapped the area, marking roads and stock routes while looking for minerals.

Collecting Melaleuaca triumphalis. (2019) by Marjorie KingAustralian Seed Bank Partnership

21st century expedition

Fast forward 141 years, another expedition set out in the same area to commemorate these early explorers. This group came across a species that had not been described by Western science, the Melaleuca triumphalis

Melaleuca triumphalis green flowers. (2019) by Marjorie KingAustralian Seed Bank Partnership

Only found in Gregory National Park

Melaleuca triumphalis likes to grow at the base of temporary waterfalls where water slowly seeps through the rock. It can be found on the sandstone cliffs along the Victoria River.

Melaleuca triumphalis green flowers. (2019) by Marjorie KingAustralian Seed Bank Partnership

Shaggy shrub?

Reaching a maximum height of 2.5 metres, this tree looks more like a shrub with its shaggy, silver leaves. The flowers appear in September and change from green to yellow as they age.      

Melaleuca triumphalis cream/ pink flowers. (2019) by Marjorie KingAustralian Seed Bank Partnership

Climate change danger

Climate change has the potential to affect the future reproductive ecology of this species, so research is needed to support its ongoing survival in the Northern Territory.

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Intrepid botanists

With the species known to occur in only one location a new team of intrepid botanists from the George Brown Darwin Botanic Gardens decided to revisit the population. Their aim was to ensure seeds of this tree species be collected and banked as soon as possible.

Collecting Melaleuaca triumphalis. (2019) by Marjorie KingAustralian Seed Bank Partnership

Seeding success

Luckily for Melaleuca triumphalis the expedition was a great success with the team collecting sufficient seeds in 2019, securing a valuable conservation collection of this rare tree species.  

Melaleuca triumphalis flowers. (2019) by Marjorie KingAustralian Seed Bank Partnership

Global Tree Seed Bank Project

Seeds from Melaleuca triumphalis and other threatened tree species, from the Northern Territory are being securely stored at the George Brown Darwin Botanic Gardens and duplicate collections are held at the Millennium Seed Bank in the UK.

Learn more about the George Brown Darwin Botanic Gardens via their website.

Credits: Story

Stories compiled through a science communication internship at the Australian Seed Bank Partnership with Master of Science Communication student Christine Fernance from the ANU Centre for the Public Awareness of Science. 

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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