Common Name: grand eucalyptus
Family: Myrtaceae
Common Synonyms: none
USDA Hardiness Zone: 9b - 11
Growth Habit: Tree
Origin: Australia
FISC Category: -
FDACS Listed Noxious Weed: No
Introduction Date: specimen vouchered in 1986
IFAS Assessment:
Evergreen tree to 55 m tall, bark smooth, peeling in long, strips to expose a powdery surface. Leaves dark green and glossy above, paler below to 20 cm long. Cream colored flowers with exerted stamens to 8 mm long, pear-shaped. Fruit a brown pear-shaped capsule 7-10 mm long.
Disturbed sites
Vouchered from Pinellas and Lake Okeechobee area. Proposed as a biofuel species.
No specific recommendations available. <i>Eucalyptus globulus</i> (Tasmanian blue gum) was best controlled by glyphosate, relative to imazapyr, tricolpyr 3A & 4, and picloram+2,4-D. [https://wric.ucdavis.edu/information/natural%20areas/wr_E/Eucalyptus.pdf]
Booth, T. 2012. Eucalypts and their potential for invasiveness particularly in frost-prone regions. International Journal of Forestry Research 2012: 1-7.
Dave's Garden. 2013. PlantFiles: Rose gum eucalyptus, flooded gum, rose gum, Eucalyptus grandis. http://davesgarden.com/guides/pf/go/75509/. Accessed on December 9, 2013.
Invasive Species South Africa. 2013. Saligna gum, Eucalyptus grandis. http://www.invasives.org.za/invasive-species/item/252-saligna-gum-eucalyptus-grandis.html. Accessed on December 9, 2013.