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Describe the plant here...
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'''''Acacia papyrocarpa''''', commonly known as '''western myall''', is a [[tree]] in the [[family (biology)|family]] [[Fabaceae]]. Endemic to [[Australia]], it occurs on [[limestone]] plains in southern Australia from [[Paynes Find, Western Australia|Paynes Find]] in [[Western Australia]] eastwards into [[South Australia]]. There is also an anomalous specimen at [[Cooper Creek]] in [[Queensland]]. A weeping form of the species that grows at [[Port Augusta, South Australia]] bears the common name '''Water myall'''.
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Western myall grows as an upright tree to seven metres high.  Like most ''[[Acacia]]'' species, it has [[phyllode]]s rather than true leaves.  These are greyish-green in colour, straight and flat, between four and twelve centimetres long and one to two millimetres wide.  The flowers are yellow, and held in spherical clusters about five millimetres in diameter.  The pods are thin and flat, about eleven centimetres long and four to ten millimetres wide.
    
==Cultivation==
 
==Cultivation==