Myrtaceae Juss.
Eucalyptus pachyloma Benth.
, legitimate, scientific
[Bentham, G. (5 January 1867), Orders XLVIII. Myrtaceae- LXII. Compositae. Flora Australiensis 3]:
237
[tax. nov.]
-
Type:
"W. Australia. Drummond, 4th Coll. n. 64; sand plains, Kalgan river, Oldfield; Valleys of the Stirling range, Maxwell."
[Diels, F.L.E. & Pritzel, E.G. (6 December 1904), Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae occidentalis. Beitrage zur Kenntnis der Pflanzen Westaustraliens, ihrer Verbreitung und ihrer Lebensverhaltnisse. Botanische Jahrbücher für Systematik, Pflanzengeschichte und Pflanzengeographie 35(2-3)]:
442
[secondary reference]
[Maiden, J.H. (October 1905), A Critical Revision of the Genus Eucalyptus 1(7)]:
199
[taxonomic synonym]
taxonomic synonym of:
Eucalyptus diversifolia Bonpl.
legitimate
[Maiden, J.H. (1917), A Critical Revision of the Genus Eucalyptus 4(3)]:
84-89, pl. 139
[secondary reference]
[Green, J.W. (1985), Census of the Vascular Plants of Western Australia Edn. 2]:
126
[secondary reference]
[Chippendale, G.M. in George, A.S. (ed.) (27 June 1988), Eucalyptus. Flora of Australia 19]:
129, Fig. 53E-F, Map 93
[secondary reference]
common name:
Kalgan Plains Mallee
[n/a]
[Robson, Peter J. (1993), Checklist of Australian Trees: alphabetical listings of common and scientific names]:
-
[secondary reference]
common name:
Kalgan Plains Mallee
[n/a]
[Brooker, M.I.H. (28 February 2000), A new classification of the genus Eucalyptus L'Her. (Myrtaceae). Australian Systematic Botany 13(1)]:
132
APC
[secondary reference]
[Centre for Plant Biodiversity Research (2006), EUCLID Edn. 3]:
-
[secondary reference]
[French, M. & Nicolle, D. (2019), Eucalypts of Western Australia: The south-west coast and ranges]:
282-283
[secondary reference]
-
Type:
"Swan River Colony [WA], 1845, J.Drummond 4: 64 (syn: BM, CGE, E, FI, G, K, MEL, NSW, PERTH, W); Kalgan River WA, A.Oldfield 324 (syn: G); Stirling Range, WA, G.Maxwell s.n. (syn: K, MEL)."
common name:
Kalgan Plains mallee
[n/a]
-
Etymology:
"From the Greek pachys (thick or stout) and loma (border or fringe), referring to the thick , raised rim of its fruits."