Ternstroemia Cherryi (F.M.Bailey) Merr
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Australian Tropical Rainforest Plants - Online edition Ternstroemia cherryi (F.M.Bailey) Merr. ex J.F.Bailey & C.T.White Family: Pentaphylacaceae Bailey, J.F. & White, C.T. (1917) Queensland Department of Agriculture and Stock. Botany Bulletin 19: 3. Common name: Beech, Cherry; Cherry Beech Stem Seldom grows beyond 30 cm dbh. Yellowish brown, brittle stripes in the blaze. Blaze colour darkens on exposure. Leaves Midrib depressed on the upper surface. Leaf blades about 6-16 x 3-6 cm, crowded towards the ends of the twigs in groups of three to five. Main lateral veins, (but few other veins), visible on the upper Leaves, flowers and buds. © surface of the leaf blade. Leaf blade rather thick and fleshy. CSIRO Flowers Pedicel about 5-30 mm long but usually 10-20 mm long. Sepals unequal (the outer ones smaller), thick and entire, about 1-3.5 x 2-7 mm. Petals thick, waxy, entire, about 5-12 x 7-12 mm. Stamens about 100-200, anthers +/- forked at the apex, filaments about 1-1.5 mm long. Ovary broadly ovoid- oblong, two ovules per locule. Styles about 1-1.5 mm long. Fruit Fruits globular or ovoid, about 30-50 x 25-35 mm, calyx lobes persistent at the base. Seeds 15-20 Leaves and fruit. © B. Gray mm long. Aril papillose. Embryo U-shaped, cotyledons narrower than the radicle. Seedlings Cotyledons small, triangular, about 3-7 x 1-2 mm, without visible venation, appressed to the stem. First pair of leaves elliptic, about 25-55 x 15-35 mm, glabrous. At the tenth leaf stage: leaf blade obovate, apex shortly acuminate, base attenuate, glabrous, often produced in whorls or pseudowhorls. Cataphylls sometimes produced among true leaves. Seed germination time 20 to 87 days. Distribution and Ecology Occurs in NT, CYP and NEQ. Altitudinal range from sea level to 800 m. Grows as an understory tree Fruit, side view, cross section and in well developed lowland and upland rain forest. Also occurs in New Guinea. seed. © W. T. Cooper Natural History & Notes A decorative shrub or small tree not commonly cultivated but would be suitable for tropical plantings. Large cream flowers are followed by bright orange fruit that last on the plant for a considerable time. Synonyms Garcinia cherryi F.M.Bailey, The Queensland Flora 6: 103(1902), Type: Coen, F.J. Cherry [given by W.R.Barker, Brunonia 3 (1980) 27 as F.J. Cherry s.n., Queensland, Cook District, Coen, BRI 011336.]. RFK Code 121 © CSIRO Copyright © CSIRO 2020, all rights reserved. Scale bar 10mm. © CSIRO Cotyledon stage, epigeal germination. © CSIRO 10th leaf stage. © CSIRO Cotyledon stage, epigeal germination. © CSIRO Web edition hosted at https://apps.lucidcentral.org/rainforest.