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Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery 17 February to 17 April 2020 Banksia serrata (Saw Banksia) (MEL 583558) State Botanical Collection, Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria
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Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Jun 18, 2020

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Page 1: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Australian Plants Revealed:

65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science

Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

17 February to 17 April 2020

Banksia serrata (Saw Banksia) (MEL 583558) State Botanical Collection, Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria

Page 2: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

In 1770 Lieutenant James Cook brought the Bark Endeavour to the east coast of

Australia. This enabled the naturalist Joseph Banks and the botanist Daniel Solander to

collect plants at each place they landed. These collections were taken to London to be

examined and classified according to the Linnaeus system which Solander had learned as

a protégé of Carl Linnaeus botanist, zoologist and physician in Sweden. Six specimens

collected during that voyage are displayed in this exhibition along with 31 images of

others, Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria.

Australia’s First Nations people had been sustained by Australian plants for food,

medicine, tools and shelter for at least 65,000 years before these collections were made.

Aunty Irene Norman, proud Wailwan/Wiradjuri woman and Elder from Mullum Mullum

Indigenous Gathering Place, has provided the information and weavings that demonstrate

the diverse use of native plants by our First Nations people in the many aspects of

everyday life and culture. Traditional gathering baskets, seed pots and serving plates

speak to the strong connections to Country and the complex knowledge systems that

continue to be passed down through the generations.

There remains such a lot to learn about how First Nations people utilised the plants many

of which, including Eucalypts and Acacias, had evolved in the 33 million years since

Australia separated from Gondwana creating our unique flora. In presenting this

exhibition the Australian Plants Society-Victoria has aimed to respectfully seek help and

listen to First Nations people to learn more about our flora.

When the exhibition closes Australian Plant Society-Victoria will donate all the framed

images to Royal Botanic Gardens of Victoria. This will enable the Gardens to display

images without risking damage to the precious specimens. The following images are a

catalogue of contemporary photographs of the botanical species included in the

exhibition but does not include images of the plant specimens collected by Banks and

Solander.

Acknowledgements

For financial support:

Australian Plants Society-Victoria

Australian Plants Society-Maroondah Group Australian Plants society-Keilor Plains Group

Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria for permission to exhibit 6 specimens and 30 images from the Banks-Solander

collection and particularly Dr Pina Milne, Manager Collections, Melbourne Herbarium for her assistance. Australian National Herbarium, Canberra for permission to display an image of Viola banksii.

Rodger Elliot, Bruce Gray, David Jones and Chris Clarke for plant photographs for labels and Sandra Sanger for

access to paintings from her collection for publicity artwork.

Page 3: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Lygodium japonicum

In Australia the Japanese Climbing Fern grows in tropical

areas of Western Australia, Northern Territory and

Queensland. It is widespread across Asian countries.

Use by First Nations people

• Leaves are used for cleaning, scrubbing and stings

• Young vines are used for weaving

• Vines are used for stiff ropes

Photo: David Jones

Page 4: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Phragmites australis (Common Reed)

A vigorous, handsome bamboo-like member of the grass family. Found in all states and territories growing on the margins of ponds,

pools and waterways in water to about two metres deep or in

regularly inundated areas.

Use by First Nations people

This reed has a multitude of everyday and ritual uses including;

• Leaves were twisted into ropes

• Young shoots are eaten raw or cooked

• The tall bamboo-like stems are prized as spears

• The stems are also used to make necklaces and inserted

through the nasal septum as a decoration

• The leaves are used in all areas of weaving, sitting mats,

sleeping mats, gathering baskets and bags, food platters,

decorations and jewellery

• Digging and stabbing tools

• Rafts made from bundles of stems

• Medicine for bug bites, grazes etc.

• Fibre for bedding and clothes

Photo: Rodger Elliot

Page 5: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Epacris longiflora (Fuchsia Heath)

A popular ornamental plant, which is best known from the Sydney Sandstone Basin. Occurs in wet coastal heath to the fringes of

eucalypt forests and woodlands. The native range extends from

coastal Sydney and north into southern Queensland.

Use by First Nations people

• Prevention of sandy soil erosion

• Flowers used as decoration

Photo: Rodger Elliot

Page 6: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Merremia quinata

Widespread in seasonally dry tropical areas of Western Australia, Northern Territory and Queensland. It is widespread across Asian

countries.

Use by First Nations people

• Cooked seeds are used as a food

• Crushed seeds are used as a laxative

Page 7: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Melaleuca quinquenervia (Broad-leaved Paperbark)

Widely distributed in coastal and near-coastal districts from north-

eastern Queensland to south-eastern New South Wales. Forms

communities in swamps and sluggish watercourses. Also occurs in New Guinea and New Caledonia.

Use by First Nations people

• Sleeping mats, lean-to shelters

• Absorbent pads for menses, wound dressings

• Baby bedding, nappies

• Wrapping food for cooking

Photo: Chris Clarke

Page 8: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Histiopteris incisa (Bat’s Wing Fern)

Widely distributed in coastal and near-coastal districts from north-eastern Queensland to south-eastern New South Wales. Forms

communities in swamps and sluggish watercourses. Also occurs in

New Guinea and New Caledonia.

Use by First Nations people

• Sleeping mats, lean-to shelters

• Absorbent pads for menses, wound dressings

• Baby bedding, nappies

• Wrapping food for cooking

Photo: Rodger Elliot

Page 9: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Xerochrysum bracteatum (Golden Everlasting)

Widespread in eastern Australian states from north Queensland to Tasmania and a range of growing conditions. Many variants are

very popular in cultivation. Early forms were bred in Europe and

mixed with South African forms and other colourful daises. These are frequently sold in mixed seed packs.

Use by First Nations people

• Used for decorations, both dried and fresh

• Woven into reed bowls for special rites

• Hair decorations

Photo: Rodger Elliot

Page 10: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Castanospermum australe (Moreton Bay Chestnut)

A fine spreading tree growing in rainforests and coastal scrubs from

Cape York Peninsula, Queensland and south to Bellinger River New South Wales.

Use by First Nations people

• Very toxic seeds, raw ingestion causes vomiting and diarrhoea

• Seeds need to be soaked or left for several days in running water,

then dried and ground for making damper or baked and eaten

• A signal is sent to meet at the Black Bean tree when it is time to

hunt fowl

• Children played with the empty seed pods as toy boats

Photo: Rodger Elliot

Page 11: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Acacia complanata (Flat-stemmed or Long-pod Wattle)

A medium to tall spreading shrub. Widespread in coastal districts from northern New South Wales to central Queensland but often in gravelly soils in bloodwood

forests.

First Nations people valued most of the 1,000 species of wattle for their many

uses, including some of the following:

• Timber for tools/weapons:- Boomerangs, spear throwers, spears, digging

sticks, shields and nulla nullas (clubs)

• Sap as a drink for coughs and colds, chest infections

• Sap applied directly to cuts and abrasions as an antiseptic

• Sap melted for glue and water-proofing of skins, cloaks, clothing and

bedding.

• Edible seeds ground for flour, powdered seeds used as a spice.

(Please note that some Acacia species are not suitable as food because of

their cyanide content.)

• Fish poison

• Pain killer

• Sap chewed as a sweet chewing gum to assuage thirst.

• Falling blossoms was an indication of season change; the Bunjalung people of

the northern coastal area of New South Wales stop hunting the long-necked

turtle at this time and Wurundjeri people in Victoria begin the eel harvest.

Photo: David Jones

Page 12: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Gleichenia microphylla (Scrambling Coral Fern)

A fern forming extensive tangled colonies. Widespread in much of

eastern and southern Australia.

Use by First Nations people

• Leaves boiled as tea

• Liquid also used for antiseptic wound applications

• Bedding

Photo: Rodger Elliot

Page 13: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Drynaria quercifolia (Oak-leaf Fern)

An epiphytic or lithophytic fern. Widely distributed in northern

Australia usually found on trees or rocks in sunny, humid situations.

Use by First Nations people

• Used as poultice to treat inflammation, applied directly to

swellings

• Consumption strengthens and heals bones and ligaments

• Benefits for kidney and liver health

• Used as a strong daily drink, prevents pregnancy

Photo: David Jones

Page 14: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Coronidium scorpioides (Button Everlasting)

Widespread and adaptable species occurring in heathland, grasslands

and open forest from Gibraltar Range in northern New South Wales to Victoria, Tasmania and south-eastern South Australia.

Use by First Nations people

• Yellow flowers used mostly for decoration

Photo: Rodger Elliot

Page 15: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Grevillea pteridifolia (Golden Grevillea)

Distributed across tropical Australia and is common in woodlands,

treed heath, coastal headlands, sandstone escarpments and low-

lying swampy areas.

Use by First Nations people

• Used as an herb stuffing when cooking Emu

• Bedding

• Used as an antibacterial wash

Photo: David Jones

Page 16: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Cyperus polystachyos (Many-spiked Flat Sedge)

Grows in and along creeks and rivers in rainforest, Melaleuca

forest, vine thickets, Eucalypt forest and swampy places in various

types of woodland and grassland, even in salty mud of the seashore. Widespread in the warm parts of the world.

Use by First Nations people

• Used for weaving mats and platters for food. Too harsh for

bedding

Page 17: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Centella cordifolia (Swamp Pennywort)

A dwarf perennial creeping herb, which occurs in margins of

swamps and wet places. Can cover large areas. Occurs in South Australia, New South Wales, Victoria and Tasmania.

Use by First Nations people

• Used as a cooking herb

• Medicinally used for arthritis, rheumatism and neural

conditions

Photo: Rodger Elliot

Page 18: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Deplanchea tetraphylla

(Golden Bouquet Tree, Wallaby Wireless Tree)

A small tree which produces stunning yellow flowers which

attract pollinating birds and animals. Occurs in the wet tropics of

Queensland into New Guinea and Aru Islands.

Use by First Nations people

• Leaves used to wrap food and as cooking platters

• Wood used for digging tools and some weapons such as

the nulla nulla

Photo: Bruce Gray

Page 19: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Eustrephus latifolius (Wombat Berry)

Climber or scrambling ground cover widely distributed from

north-eastern Queensland to eastern Victoria. Grows in rainforest,

open forest, coastal scrubs and stream banks.

Use by First Nations people

• Vines are used in weaving gathering baskets

• Berries contain edible pulp

• Raw roots are sweet tasting

• Tubers are edible when baked, tasting much like potato

Photo: Rodger Elliot

Page 20: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Banksia dentata (Tropical Banksia)

Acacia ulicifolia (Prickly Moses or Juniper Wattle)

A small prickly wattle found in sclerophyll forests along coasts

and tablelands from Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria and

Tasmania.

Traditional uses by First Nations people are listed in the Acacia

label

Photo: Murray Fagg, Australian Plant Image Index

Page 21: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Banksia dentata (Tropical Banksia)

This tall shrub or small straggly tree occurs in northern tropical

areas of Western Australia, Northern Territory and Queensland

also in Papua New Guinea, Irian Jaya and the Aru Islands. Grows around swamps and in heathlands often forming large extensive

colonies.

Use by First Nations people

• Nectar attracts honey bees for a source of honeycomb and

fresh honey

• Dried flower cones which burn for up to two hours are used

for fire brands when hunting, burning off or moving camp

• Nectar is drunk as an energy source (electrolytes)

• A hot, smoking flower spike was used to cauterise Leprosy

sores and wounds

• Woody spikes are used by women as nasal decorations

• Flower spikes are used as hair combs

Photo: David Jones

Page 22: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Blechnum camfieldii (Eared Swamp Fern)

A handsome medium to tall clumping fern, sometimes forming a

small trunk. Occurs in Queensland and New South Wales.

Use by First Nations people

• Fronds are stripped and the stems of up to one metre are used

to weave gathering bags

Photo: David Jones

Page 23: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Allocasuarina littoralis (Black She-oak)

A slender or spreading small tree. Widespread in coastal and

highland areas from Cape York Peninsula Queensland through New South Wales and Victoria to southern Tasmania. Female

flowers are red while male flowers are brown and much smaller.

Use by First Nations people

• Bark is used for tanning skins

• Wood is used for fuel, tools and weapons of all types

• Excellent long-lasting coals can be packed and transported for

days when the community move to the next site at the end of a

season

Photo: Rodger Elliot

Page 24: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Haemodorum coccineum (Scarlet Bloodroot)

This most spectacular member of the genus is a perennial herb that

is widely distributed across northern Australia and extends into

Papua New Guinea.

Use by First Nations people

• Snake bite treatment

• Stalks used as fire sticks

• Used as red, brown (root) or purple (fruit) dye for plant fibres

used in decorative weaving for rites and on skins

• Used for weaving baskets, string bags and fibre sculptures

Photo: Rodger Elliot

Page 25: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Morinda reticulata (Mapoon)

An attractive dwarf to small sub-shrub or climber from woodlands of north-eastern Queensland.

Use by First Nations people

• Has edible leaves used in a variety of ways for meals and teas.

• Used as a herb in cooking

• Fruit used as a red/purple dye

Photo: David Jones

Page 26: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Xyris complanata (Feathered Yellow-eye)

This tufted perennial herb occurs over a wide range of tropical and sub-tropical areas from the Kimberley, Western Australia, across

Northern Territory and Queensland down to central New South

Wales. While not common in cultivation it may be suitable for bog gardens.

Use by First Nations people

• Used as a herb in cooking

• Pollen attracts bees who then create a source of honey-comb

and honey

• Used in weaving

Page 27: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Cycas media subspecies banksii (Cycad)

A member of a very primitive groups of plants that have links to palms and

ferns. Widespread in tropical, coastal areas of Queensland. While usually 1

to 3 meters tall old specimens occasionally found to reach 8 meters.

Use by First Nations people

• Toxins are leached from the seeds or the seeds are left to age

before being ground as a flour for dough or cakes, or eaten like a nut

• Mixed with water as a glue

• Used in men’s initiation rites, in this case not to be touched by women

• Used as a communion food when large groups get together

Photo: David Jones

Page 28: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Cochlospermum gillivraei (Kapok Tree)

Medium slender shrub to small tree widespread in northern coastal and inland districts of Northern Territory and Queensland.

Use by First Nations people

• Young roots are baked in coals and hammered before being eaten

• Flower petals are eaten raw

• Cotton hairs of the seed capsules are used for body decoration

Photo: David Jones

Page 29: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Vitex trifolia var. trifolia (Blue Vitex)

Medium to tall shrub with a semi-climbing to sprawling habit with

ornamental leaf under- surface. Widespread in coastal districts of

Northern Territory, Queensland and New South Wales from mangroves to littoral rainforests.

Use by First Nations people

This plant is literally a pharmacopeia! Here are several of its uses

• Leaves are used to relieve menstrual cramps. Roots are used to

reduce fevers and treat liver ailments

• Dried, burnt leaves act as a mosquito repellent

• A decoction of the dried fruits is given for common cold,

headache, watery eyes and mastitis

• The inner bark is chewed as a remedy for dysentery

• The leaves used to relieve pain as an antiseptic and diuretic

Photo: Rodger Elliot

Page 30: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Acronychia laevis (Hard Aspen)

This attractive tall shrub or small tree occurs from Cape York Peninsula Queensland to north-eastern New South Wales and on

Lord Howe Island.

Use by First Nations people

• The oil of the leaves, fruit and bark contain anti-microbial and

anti-fungal properties

Photo: David Jones

Page 31: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Viola banksii (Wild Violet)

A dwarf stoloniferous perennial herb, which can cover large areas

in moist soils. Occurs in south-eastern Queensland and New South Wales. Popular in cultivation and sometimes grown under the

incorrect name V. hederacea.

Use by First Nations people:

• Leaves were twisted into ropes

Photo: Rodger Elliot

Page 32: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Callistemon citrinus (Crimson Bottlebrush)

A medium shrub to small tree. Well known in cultivation in

Australia and overseas. Occurs in swampy or damp areas in south-

eastern Queensland, through eastern New South Wales and into south-eastern Victoria

Use by First Nations people:

• Leaves are brewed as tea sweetened by nectar from flowers

• Nectar used as a sweet energy drink (electrolytes)

• Natural herbicide/insect repellent

• Shoots and young cones can be eaten

• Wood used for all types of tools and weapons

• Used as wind breaks

Photo: Rodger Elliot

Page 33: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Chrysocephalum apiculatum (Golden Buttons)

A variable spreading dwarf perennial herb. Very extensive

distribution across all states and territories. Hardy and very popular in cultivation.

Use by First Nations people

• Mostly decorative, worn in hair or as a necklace

• Used as a herb in cooking

• Low plant used against soil erosion

Photo: Rodger Elliot

Page 34: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Banksia serrata (Saw Banksia)

Widespread in eastern Australia, extending from southern Queensland along the

coast to Wilsons Promontory on Victoria's south coast. The plant occurs as far

inland as the Great Dividing Range. There is also a population across Bass Strait in northern Tasmania.

Use by First Nations people

• A sweet drink by straining water through the cones.

• Cones used to transport fire from camp to camp.

• Needles tools and weapons made from the wood.

• Flower spikes used as hair combs, scratchers and scrapers.

Page 35: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Platycerium bifurcatum (Elkhorn Fern)

Found growing on trees and rock-faces in the understorey

of rainforests along creek margins and in moist shaded gullies from southern NSW north to Cooktown and in

Papua New Guinea. Popular fern in cultivation.

Use by First Nations people

• Young leaves used to wrap food

• Older leaves used as eating plates

• Whole plant used as water catchment

Photo: Rodger Elliot

Page 36: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Pandorea pandorana subspecies pandorana (Wonga Vine)

Variable climber or scrambler with a diverse distribution in

coastal scrub to rainforests from the Northern Territory to

Tasmania.

Use by First Nations people

• Woomera – cast spear

• Digging sticks

• Weaving

Photo: Rodger Elliot

Page 37: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Eucalyptus platyphylla (Poplar or Cabbage Gum)

A medium-sized tree, occurring in the coastal strip of

eastern Queensland from Horn Island in the Torres Strait

and Cape York Peninsula, south through drier western parts of the Atherton Tablelands south to Rockhampton.

Use by First Nations people

• Antiseptic

• Treatment for aches and pains

• Dyes for skins, decorations and fibre for weaving

Photo: JCU

Page 38: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Alocasia brisbanensis (Native Lily or Cunjevoi)

Grows in rainforests of eastern Australia and is hardy in cultivation as far south as Victoria. Pleasantly fragrant

flowers. Although related to edible Taro this plant is

poisonous.

Use by First Nations people

• Extremely toxic plant that can cause death if the leaves,

flowers or stems are consumed

• The juice/sap causes skin irritation in the form of a

burning rash

• Avoided by all Indigenous clans/tribes

Photo: Rodger Elliot

Page 39: Australian Plants Revealed - Maroondah City Council...Australian Plants Revealed: 65,000 years of traditional plant use and 250 years of science Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery

Lambertia formosa (Mountain Devil)

Popular in cultivation however restricted in nature to sandstone-based soils around Sydney, inland to Braidwood

and north to Port Stephens. The only eastern Australian

member of this genus with a further nine species in Western Australia.

Use by First Nations people

• Food - profuse nectar and edible flowers

• Prevention of soil erosion

• Decoration

Photo: Rodger Elliot