Cryptocarya foetida

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File:Cryptocarya foetida.jpg
Fruit in the Royal Botanic Garden, Sydney

Cryptocarya foetida, commonly known as stinking cryptocarya or stinking laurel,[1] is a species of flowering plant in the family Lauraceae and is endemic to eastern Australia. It is a small to medium-sized tree with egg-shaped to elliptic leaves, cream coloured, unpleasantly perfumed, tube-shaped flowers, and spherical black to purplish drupes.

Description

Cryptocarya foetida is a small or medium-sized tree that typically grows to a height of up to Template:Cvt, the stem not butressed with a trunk dbh of Template:Cvt. The leaves are egg-shaped to elliptic or oval, Template:Cvt long and Template:Cvt wide on a petiole Template:Cvt long. Both surfaces of the leaves are glabrous with prominent veins, and the lower surface is paler. The flowers are arranged in dense panicles that are shorter than the leaves, the perianth tube Template:Cvt long and Template:Cvt wide. The tepals are Template:Cvt long and Template:Cvt wide, the outer anthers Template:Cvt long and Template:Cvt wide, the inner anthers Template:Cvt long and Template:Cvt wide. Flowering mainly occurs in February, and the fruit is a spherical black to purplish-black drupe, Template:Cvt long and Template:Cvt wide.[1][2][3]

Taxonomy

Cryptocarya foetida was first formally described in 1905 by Richard Thomas Baker in the Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales.[4][5] The specific epithet (foetida) is a Latin word meaning 'stinking' or 'evil-smelling.[6]

Distribution and habitat

Stinking cryptocarya occurs from east of Gympie in southern Queensland to Iluka in northern New South Wales, where it grows in littoral rainforest on old sand dunes.[2][3]

Conservation status

This species of Cryptocarya is listed as "vulnerable" under the Australian Government Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 and the New South Wales Government Biodiversity Conservation Act 2016. The main threats to the species are its small population size, clearing and fragmentation of habitat, and weed invasion.[1][3]

Gallery

References

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External links

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