Back | Salinity Indicator Plants Home | Common name home | Scientific name home | Photo Gallery | Glossary
Creeping Saltbush photos | Family: Saltbush (Chenopodiaceae) |
Scientific Name: | Altriplex semibaccata | Trailing stems of fruiting Creeping Saltbush Photo: A J Brown | |||||
Other Common Names: | Berry Saltbush, Diamond Saltbush | ||||||
Status: | Australian native. | ||||||
Plant Description: | Perennial subshrub, with long slender, weak and rather brittle prostrate stems. Spreading to 1 m or more and rarely exceeding 30 cm in height. The leaves are up to 25 mm long, oblong to lance-shaped, often toothed on the margins, green above and mealy-white below. Small, inconpspicuous clusters of flowers in leaf axils. Fruits are succulent red berries when fresh, 4-6 mm long, rather flat and diamond shaped. | ||||||
Habitat: | Found in a range of soil types but more common on clay loams and clays. It readily colonises scalds and bare areas, tolerating moderate to high soil salinity.
| ||||||
Comments: | This species often grows in dense mats up to a few metres across and produces prolific amounts of seed. It can be useful as stock-feed when conditions are dry, though a few cases have been reported where it was suspected of stock poisoning when oxalate levels in young plants were excessive. It has been used overseas as a coloniser with some success. |
Creeping Saltbush Flower Ex Ma | Ripe fruit of Creeping Saltbush Photo: A J Brown |
Creeping Saltbush leaves Photo: A J Brown | Creeping Saltbush plant Photo: A J Brown |
Creeping Saltbush leaf Photo: A J Brown | Young developing fruit of Creeping Saltbush Photo: A J Brown |