I get to E.stricta or E.burgessiana on EUCLID. Buds are more pyriform shaped than standard images for E.burgessiana. So I am uncertain, as I am not sure about integrades with the green-leaved mallee ashes.
I would say E.stricta, it is far more common around katoomba. Though It's not a group I know well either, really the person you want to look at it is Dean Nicolle. He is easy to contact via inat
Yes, and PLANTNET mentions lots of integrades of E.stricta with other closely related. So that might explain wider leaves. The buds look more like E.stricta.
Reviewing the images again: The oil glands are irregular which points to E.stricta or E.burgessiana - although in E.burgessiana they appear less so. But the leaf width places it just outside the maximum listed for E.stricta on EUCLID. I will email Dean Nicolle this sighting link to see if he can resolve for us.
@MatthewFrawley and @Tapirlord : Dr Dean Nicolle got back to me and said it is likely to be E.dendromorpha. It is a common species on and around wet cliffs in the central Blue Mountains, and closely related to E.stricta and E.burgessiana. Older Eucalypt books and EUCLID only list as a tree, hence why when keying out there was some confusion. I compared with a sighting on the South Coast that was identified as E.dendromorpha too, and they are a good match. Interestingly the older texts and EUCLID say it does not have a lignotuber, but that now needs revising. After the 2019-20 fires a lot of E.dendromorpha went from tree form to mallee form, so a lignotuber was present. Maybe there are populations with and without lignotubers.
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