Tasmanian Blue Gum
Eucalyptus globulus subsp. globulus
Other Common names:
Southern blue gum, Blue gum.
Tasmanian
blue gum is a tough but pale hardwood. Its notable hardness and density makes
it ideal for floors, fittings and surfaces expected to take considerable wear.
The timber established a reputation with early European settlers for its
toughness and durability, particularly for bridge construction, railway
sleepers, mine timbers and wharf piling. The leaves and large flower cases have
a strong and characteristic fragrance. Oils extracted from blue gum leaves were
also exported for use in medicines and varnishes.
Tasmanian blue gum
is pale straw to brown, often with blue to green-grey tones. The sapwood is paler than heartwood, but
often difficult to distinguish. Blue gum is one of
The
Resource
The
natural habitat of blue gum covers most of eastern coastal
In favourable
conditions, Tasmanian blue gum is a tall, straight tree growing to 70 metres
high and 2 metres in diameter. The greater part of the trunk and the branches
are smooth with the rough bark shedding in strips on the lower parts of tree
and persistent at the base. The juvenile leaves are broad, up to 15 cm long and
covered with a blue-grey, waxy bloom.
Tasmanian
blue gums grows rapidly particularly with intense cultivation. Blue gum
plantations, established predominantly for pulp and paper, commonly grow 20 to
30m3 of wood fibre per hectare annually, and young trees can grow 2m
in height each year. It is now the world's most widely planted eucalypt.