Acacia binervia

Acacia binervia commonly known as the coast myall,[2]is a flowering tree in the family Fabaceae and grows in New South Wales and Victoria.

Acacia binervia is a shrub or small tree up to 16 m (52 ft) high and the bark is dark brown to grey, flaky and furrowed.

In 1919 James Francis Macbride changed the name to Acacia binervia and the description was published in Contributions of the Gray Herbarium of Harvard University.

[2][3] Acacia binervia regenerates from bushfire by a soil-borne seedbank, the seeds germinate and grow after fire while adult plants are killed.

[3] For the Dharawal people, the flowering of Acacia binervia was used as a seasonal indicator of the presence of fish in bays and estuaries.

Habit