Mallee are trees or shrubs, mainly certain species of eucalypts, which grow with multiple stems springing from an underground lignotuber, usually to a height of no more than 10 m (33 ft). The term is widely used for trees with this growth habit across southern Australia, in the states of Western Australia, South Australia, New South Wales and Victoria, and has given rise to other uses of the term, including the ecosystems where such trees predominate, specific geographic areas within some of the states and as part of various species' names.
Etymology
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The word is thought to originate from the word mali, meaning water, in the Wemba Wemba language,[1] an Aboriginal Australian language of southern New South Wales and Victoria.[2] The word is also used in the closely related Woiwurrung language and other Aboriginal languages of Victoria, South Australia, and southern New South Wales.[3]
Overview
The term mallee is used describe various species of trees or woody plants, mainly of the genusEucalyptus, which grow with multiple stems springing from an underground bulbous woody structure called a lignotuber, or mallee root,[4] usually to a height of no more than 10 m (33 ft). The term is widely used for trees with this across southern Australia,[5] across the states of Western Australia, South Australia, New South Wales and Victoria.[1] The term is also applied to other eucalypts with a similar growth habit,[2] in particular those in the closely related genera Corymbia and Angophora.
Some of the species grow as single-stemmed trees initially, but recover in mallee form if burnt to the ground by bushfire.[6]
Over 50 per cent of eucalypt species are mallees, and they are mostly slow-growing and tough. The lignotuber enables the plant to regenerate after fire, wind damage or other type of trauma.[4]
Range
Mallees are the dominant vegetation throughout semi-arid areas of Australia with reliable winter rainfall. Within this area, they form extensive woodlands and shrublands covering over 250,000 km2 (97,000 sq mi) in New South Wales, north-western Victoria, southern South Australia and southern Western Australia, with the greatest extent being in South Australia (118,531 square kilometres (45,765 sq mi)).[6]
Grubbing the mallee lands was a laborious and expensive task estimated at £2–7 per acre,[8] and the government offered a £200 reward for the invention of an effective machine that would remove the stumps.[9] To assist with the challenges of farming on mallee lands, some settlers turned their minds to the invention of technologies that could make some of the tasks easier. First the scrub or mallee roller was invented, which flattened the stumps and other vegetation, after which it would all be burnt and crops sown.[10] The technique became known as "mullenising", as the invention of the device was attributed to a farmer called Mullen.[11]
^"Chapter 1: Importation, adaptation and innovation in cropping". Technology in Australia 1788-1988. Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering. 1988. p. 15. ISBN0-908029-49-7. Retrieved 25 May 2021.