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Casuarina equisetifolia - 10" Grow bag

Original price ₹100 - Original price ₹100
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  • Salt- and drought-tolerant pioneer for coastal and sandy sites
  • Very fast-growing source of firewood, poles and pulpwood
  • Fixes nitrogen and stabilises dunes and degraded soil
  • Excellent windbreak and shelterbelt tree
  • Feathery, pine-like evergreen that whistles in the breeze
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Casuarina equisetifolia, commonly called Whistling Pine, Beach She-oak or Saru, is a tall, fast-growing evergreen tree that looks pine-like but is actually a flowering tree. Its true leaves are reduced to tiny scales, while the slender, jointed, drooping green branchlets do the work of photosynthesis and give the tree its soft, feathery look and characteristic whistling sound in the wind.

Native to coastal Australia, Southeast Asia and the Pacific, it has been planted extensively along India's eastern and western coasts (Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Odisha, Gujarat) for over a century. It thrives on poor, sandy and saline soils because its roots host nitrogen-fixing Frankia bacteria, making it a pioneer species for stabilising dunes and reclaiming degraded land.

It is one of the most important social-forestry and agroforestry trees in peninsular India, valued for quick-yielding firewood, poles and paper pulp, while also serving as a shelterbelt that protects crops and settlements from coastal winds and salt spray.

Specifications

Family Casuarinaceae
Native region Coastal Australia, Southeast Asia and the Pacific Islands
Mature height 15-35 m
Mature spread 5-10 m
Growth rate Fast (often 2-3 m per year when young)
Foliage Evergreen; needle-like drooping green branchlets with tiny scale leaves at joints
Flower colour Inconspicuous; brownish male spikes and tiny reddish female flowers
Flower season Mainly during and after the monsoon, varying by region
Climate zone Tropical and coastal subtropical; thrives in hot, humid, saline-littoral conditions

Care guide

Sunlight Full sun; needs bright, direct light all day and is not suited to shade.
Watering Drought-hardy once established; water young saplings regularly for the first 1-2 years, then minimal irrigation.
Soil / mix Tolerates poor, sandy, saline and coastal soils; prefers well-drained ground and grows even on dunes.
Temperature Best at 20-40 C; loves heat and tolerates coastal warmth but is sensitive to hard frost.
Humidity Tolerates a wide range; thrives in humid coastal air and salt spray.
Fertilizer Rarely needed as it fixes its own nitrogen; a little compost or NPK at planting helps establishment on very poor soil.
Pruning Minimal; remove dead or low branches and lop for poles. Lower limbs can be cleared to raise the canopy.
Repotting Grown in the ground, not as a long-term pot plant; transplant nursery saplings to their final site early.
Propagation Mainly from seed sown in nursery beds; sometimes raised from cuttings or coppice shoots.
Pests & problems Generally hardy; can be affected by stem/root rot (Trichosporium), wilt, bagworms and white grubs in nurseries.
Toxicity / safety Not known to be significantly toxic to humans or pets; the branchlets are not a normal food and are best not ingested.
Difficulty Easy

Uses

<p>Casuarina equisetifolia is a workhorse tree of coastal and social forestry in India:</p><ul><li>Coastal shelterbelts and windbreaks that protect crops, homes and beaches from wind and salt spray</li><li>Sand-dune stabilisation and reclamation of degraded, saline or eroded land</li><li>Quick-yielding firewood and charcoal with high calorific value</li><li>Poles, scaffolding, rafters and fencing for rural construction</li><li>Raw material for the paper and pulp (rayon) industry</li><li>Nitrogen-fixing improvement of poor soils in agroforestry blocks</li></ul>

Growing tips

<p>Plant saplings at the onset of the monsoon (June-July) so the rains help them establish without heavy irrigation.</p><p>It performs best near the coast or on open, sunny sites; give each tree room as it grows tall and narrow. Space closely (about 1-2 m) for pole/pulpwood plantations and wider for shade or shelterbelts.</p><p>Water young plants through the first dry season, then taper off as the deep roots take over. Avoid waterlogged spots and very heavy clay. In northern India, protect young plants from severe winter frost.</p>

Frequently asked questions

Why is Casuarina planted so much along Indian beaches?
It tolerates salt, sand and strong coastal winds, fixes its own nitrogen, and grows very fast, so it is ideal for windbreaks, shelterbelts and stabilising sandy dunes while quickly yielding firewood and poles.
How fast does Casuarina equisetifolia grow?
It is one of the fastest-growing trees, often putting on 2-3 m a year when young, and can reach harvestable pole or pulpwood size in roughly 4-7 years depending on site and spacing.
Does Casuarina need fertiliser and lots of water?
No. Its roots host nitrogen-fixing Frankia bacteria, so it needs little fertiliser, and once the first year or two of establishment is over it is highly drought-hardy and needs minimal irrigation.

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