Santalum acuminatum — a medium houseplant
SPECIMEN · FROM THE LIBRARY
Santalum acuminatum

Santalum Acuminatum

Updated · 2 observations
ON THIS PLANT

Santalum acuminatum, the desert quandong, is a hemiparasitic plant in the sandalwood family, Santalaceae, (Native to Australia) which is widely dispersed throughout the central deserts and southern areas of Australia. The species, especially its edible fruit, is also commonly referred to as quandong or native peach. The use of the fruit as an exotic flavouring, one of the best known bush tucker (bush food), has led to the attempted domestication of the species. Desert quandong is an evergreen tree, its fruit can be stewed to make pie filling for quandong pies or made into a fruit juice drink. The seed (kernel) inside the tough shell can be extracted to be crushed into a paste then be used on sore gums or an oral gum boil to ease the pain. In far-west New South Wales being one of the few drought-tolerant fruit trees around, many Aboriginal communities and local Australians that know about this fruit like to grow it.

CHARACTERISTICS

Botanical profile.

Genus
Santalum
Family
Santalaceae
ALSO KNOWN AS

Other names.

en Burn-burn en Sweet ouandong en Sweet quandong en Western quandong en Desert Peach en Desert Quandong en Quandong nut
PLATES
Santalum acuminatum other
PLATE 01 · other
Santalum acuminatum other
PLATE 02 · other
ALSO IN THE LIBRARY

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