Acacia argyrodendron


Acacia argyrodendron, known colloquially as black gidyea or blackwood, is a species of Acacia native to Australia. Czech botanist Karel Domin described this species in 1926 and it still bears its original name. Domin reported collecting the type specimen from somewhere between Camooweal and Burketown in northwestern Queensland, though it is more likely to have been northeast of Aramac.
Acacia argyrodendron is a tree, reaching high, and has dark grey to black bark.
Acacia argyrodendron is found in central Queensland in the basins of the Cape, Suttor and Belyando Rivers on clay soils in areas where the annual rainfall ranges between. It forms open forests as the dominant tree species. Associated understory plants include shrub species such as the false sandalwood, yellow-wood and conkerberry, and smaller herbaceous plants such as brigalow grass, yakka grass, blue trumpet and Dipteracanthus australasicus. Occasionally, there may be trees such as Dawson River blackbutt, coolibah and Brown's box.
Gidgee replaces it in drier habitats, while brigalow replaces it in wetter areas, as well as overlapping for part of the southern and eastern parts of its range.
It has been recorded as a host plant for the mistletoe species Amyema preissii, Amyema quandang and Lysiana exocarpi.