
Minni ritchi bark on an acacia in the Pilbara region of Western Australia

Minni ritchi bark of Eucalyptus crucis near Wongan Hills
Minni ritchi is a type of reddish-brown bark that continuously peels in small curly flakes, leaving the tree looking like it has a coat of red curly hair. Brooker and Kleinig (1990) formally described it as a bark type in which "the outer rich, red-brown smooth bark splits both longitudinally and horizontally, the free edges rolling back without completely detaching to expose new green bark beneath".
A number of species of Acacia and Eucalyptus have minni ritchi bark, including:
- Acacia curranii
 - Acacia cyperophylla (creekline miniritchie)
 - Acacia delibrata
 - Acacia gracillima
 - Acacia grasbyi (miniritchie)
 - Acacia monticola
 - Acacia rhodophloia
 - Acacia trachycarpa
 - Eucalyptus caesia (gungurru, 'Silver Princess')
 - Eucalyptus crucis (narrow-leaved silver mallee)
 - Eucalyptus minniritchi
 - Eucalyptus orbifolia
 
References
- Brooker, M.I.H. & Kleinig, D.A. (1990). Field Guide to Eucalypts, Volume 2: South-western and Southern Australia. Inkata Press, Melbourne. ISBN 0-909605-59-9.
 
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