ASGAP Logo Association of Societies for Growing Australian Plants (ASGAP)
Araucaria bidwillii
 
Ruler

Distribution Map
Family: Araucariaceae
Distribution: Mountains in south-east and northern Queensland.
Common Name: Bunya pine.
Derivation of Name: Araucaria; After the province of Arauco in Chile.
bidwillii: After John Carne Bidwill (1815-1853), a botanical collector of the 1840 - 1850 period.
Conservation Status: Not considered to be at risk in the wild.

General Description:

Araucaria is a genus of conifers consisting of about 18 species. There are three Australian members of the genus; A bidwillii, A.cunninghamii (the hoop pine from Queensland and New South Wales) and A.heterophylla (the Norfolk Island pine). The latter is endemic to Norfolk Island but is widely planted in coastal areas throughout Australia.

Araucaria bidwillii    Bunya cone diagram

Left: The distinctive shape of a mature Bunya pine tree.
Above: Diagram of male and female cones

A.bidwillii is a tall tree growing 30-45 metres in height, with a straight, rough-barked trunk, and a very distinctive symmetrical, dome-shaped crown. It is an emergent species in subtropical rainforest and is confined to Queensland, where it occurs mainly between Nambour and Gympie and west to the Bunya Mountains, with a small occurrence in north Queensland on Mt.Lewis and at Cunnabullen Falls. The glossy green leaves are lance-shaped, sharply pointed and about 50 mm long.

The male cones are narrow, cylindrical structures to about 20 cm long on the ends of short branchlets. They usually appear in autumn. The large, female fruiting cones are very large (football sized) and generally mature in summer through to early autumn but they are not formed every year (generally once every three years). Both the male and female cones are shed from the tree and can be a hazard to anyone underneath. Because of their size and weight, the female cones are particularly dangerous but the male cones are also capable of causing injury, particularly when they fall from the top of a large tree.

An exclusion zone should be created around the base of any tree that contains cones.

Each female cone contains from 50 to 100 large "nuts". These are edible and were a rich source of food for the Aborigines of south-east Queensland. During the "Bunya season" the Aborigines would temporarily set aside their tribal differences and gather in the mountains for great Bunya Nut Feasts.

Bunya - female cone and seeds
Female cone and seeds of the Bunya pine

Bunya - male cones
Male cones of the Bunya pine
Photo from the Flickr portfolio of Tatiana Gerus who allows use of her images with acknowledgement.

The bunya pine is widely cultivated in many areas and, despite it's sub-tropical/tropical origins, is hardy in colder districts of Australia. One report indicates that a 20 year old bunya pine is growing and fruiting at Mt Martha, Victoria, some 60 km south of Melbourne on the Mornington Peninsula. This is certainly a long way from "home" in Queensland. The species adapts to a range of soils but will not succeed in those which remain waterlogged for long periods.

The bunya pine also makes an attractive container plant when young, for both indoors and outdoors.

Propagation is generally carried from seed which germinates readily when fresh. Cuttings have also been successful but must be taken from upright growing shoots - cuttings from side shoots will not grow erect.


[Photo Gallery Index] [Photo Gallery (text descriptions)] [Photo Gallery (thumbnail images)]


Updated: Thursday 13 March 2008.
Thanks to Bob Cornish for information about the fruiting of a specimen in southern Victoria and to John Carmichael
for information about the hazard of the male cones.