Australian Tropical - Online edition moroides (Wedd.) Chew Family: Chew, W.L. (1965) The Gardens' Bulletin Singapore 21 : 204. Common name: Stinging Bush; Stinger; Stinger, Gympie; Stinger, Mulberry-leaved; Gympie; Gympi Gympi; Mulberry-leaved Stinger; Gympie Stinger Stem Usually flowers and fruits as a 1-3 m tall. Twigs, petioles and both the upper and lower surfaces of the blade clothed in stinging hairs which inflict long-lasting pain. Stipules caducous, about 20 x 5 mm, wedged between the and the twig or stem, +/- sheathing the terminal bud. Petioles long, about as long as the leaf blade and attached to the leaf blade so as to be peltate. Leaf blades about 12-22 x 11-18 cm. Lateral and reticulate veins raised on the upper surface of the leaf blade and the upper surface of the leaf blade Female flowers. © Barry Jago arched between the veins. Flowers Flowers small, in up to 15 cm long, clothed in stinging hairs. Perianth about 0.75 mm long, clothed in very short hairs but free(?) of stinging hairs. Staminal filaments about 2 mm long, twisting at anthesis. white. Ovary glabrous. Fruit Infructescence up to 15 cm long consisting of a number of +/- globular heads arranged in panicles. Nuts or achenes resemble small seeds and are surrounded by the fleshy, watery, swollen receptacles or pedicels. Nut or achene about 2 mm long, the outer surface minutely warty. Style moribund but persistent at the apex of the fruit. Female flowers. © CSIRO Seedlings Cotyledons +/- orbicular, about 3-5 mm diam. First pair of leaves alternate and clothed in stinging hairs, margin with a few teeth. At the tenth leaf stage: all parts clothed in stinging hairs, leaf base cordate, often peltate, petiole long, often almost as long as the leaf blade, stipules about 5-8 mm long, 2-awned at the apex. Seed germination time 40 to 92 days. Distribution and Occurs in CYP, NEQ, CEQ and southwards as far as north-eastern New South Wales. Altitudinal range from near sea level to 900 m. Usually grows in disturbed areas (particularly where the soil has been disturbed by tractors during logging) in lowland and upland rain forests. Also occurs in Malesia. Habit, leaves and flowers. © Natural History & Notes CSIRO

Fruit. © G. Sankowsky All parts of this species inflict a painful sting which can last for months. If someone receives a significant sting over a wide area of a limb, as a result of being hit hard by the , little or no sleep will be obtained the first night following the sting. Major stings cause the affected tissue to exude lymph and pains are experienced in lymph glands in the armpit or groin. Working among plants and disturbing them cause fits of sneezing and copious production of mucous from the nasal membrane. Food plant for the larval stages of the White Nymph Butterfly. Common & Waterhouse (1981). Synonyms Urticastrum moroides (Wedd.) Kuntze, Revisio Generum Plantarum 2: 635(1891). moroides Wedd., Archives du Museum d'Histoire Naturelle 9: 142(1856). moroides Wedd., Arch. Mus. Hist. Nat. 9: 142(1856), Type: , Endeavour River, A. Cunningham Fruit. © W. T. Cooper s.n.; holo: G. RFK Code 3243

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Scale bar 10mm. © CSIRO

Cotyledon stage, epigeal germination. © CSIRO

10th leaf stage. © CSIRO

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