




Casuarina equisetifolia
The Beach Sheoak is a tall tree that grows near the beach. It has long, thin leaves that look like needles and can provide shade on sunny days. This tree is great for helping to keep the sand in place!
生息地: Coastal areas
The Beach Sheoak has drooping, wispy, green branchlets that look like pine needles but are actually its stems. Its bark is rough, grey-brown, and it produces small, woody, cone-like fruits that are actually hardened flower clusters. These features make it visually distinct from true pine trees.





カテゴリ
植物レア度
Common
危険度
1/5 · 非常に低い
スナップ
最初にスナップしよう!
Indigenous Australians used its bark for medicine and its strong wood for tools.
Its 'leaves' are actually tiny green branchlets that can whistle in the wind!
The woody 'cones' are actually hardened female flower clusters, not true cones.
This tree is sometimes called 'Australian pine' because its wispy branches look like pine needles.
Beach Sheoak can grow in salty soil and withstand sea spray, helping it thrive right by the ocean.
Beach Sheoak has special root partners that turn air nitrogen into plant food, allowing it to grow in poor sandy soils.
Beach Sheoak has a strong, deep root system that helps hold sand in place, protecting beaches from erosion.
Beach Sheoak has flexible, drooping branchlets that bend with strong coastal winds, preventing damage.
Metanastria hyrtaca
Larvae feed on its branchlets.
Myiagra rubecula
Builds nests among its branches.
Pandion haliaetus
Builds nests in tall Casuarina trees.
まだ別名はありません。
危険度
1/5 · 非常に低い
Stay away from the tree's sharp needles and be careful when playing near the beach.
600-3500 cm
500-1000 cm
春〜夏
いいえ
なし
多年生
風
Coastal areas
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