Ehretia acuminata
Ehretia acuminata | |
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Ehretia acuminata trunk, at Booyong, Australia | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
(unranked): | Angiosperms |
(unranked): | Eudicots |
(unranked): | Asterids |
Order: | (unplaced) |
Family: | Boraginaceae |
Genus: | Ehretia |
Species: | E. acuminata |
Binomial name | |
Ehretia acuminata R.Br. | |
Synonyms | |
Ehretia serrata Roxb. |
Ehretia acuminata is a deciduous tree found in Japan, China, Bhutan, Nepal, Laos, Vietnam, New Guinea and Australia. Fossil evidence suggests an ancient Laurasian origin. This group of plants spread to Australia and South America via Africa, when these continents were still joined.
Commonly known as Koda in Australia, Ehretia acuminata is a common tree found from near Bega in south east New South Wales to Cape York in far north eastern Australia. The Australian habitat is many different forms of rainforest, particularly near the margins or disturbed areas.
Description
Ehretia acuminata is a medium to large size tree, occasionally reaching 30 metres in height and a 90 cm in trunk diameter.
The bark is a creamy, grey, with vertical fissures. Koda is often easily identified in winter being deciduous and of the characteristic flutings at the base of the trunk.
Leaves, flowers and fruit
The leaves are alternate and simple, tapering to a tip. Finely toothed. 8 to 13 cm long. Smooth and green on both surfaces, darker above. The midrib and lateral veins are distinct on both sides of the leaf, raised beneath.
Flowers are white, sweetly scented, in panicles. Individual flowers are without a stalk, about 4 mm in diameter. Flowers appear in September to November.
The fruit matures from January to April, being a yellow or orange drupe, 4 to 5 mm in diameter, containing four seeds. The fruit is edible to humans with a sweet taste. Fruit are eaten by many rainforest birds, including the Lewin's honeyeater, rose-crowned fruit-dove, brown cuckoo dove, wompoo fruit dove and Australasian figbird.
Seed germination is relatively easy. Ensure the flesh is removed from the fruit, and expect rapid germination.
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Ehretia acuminata - juvenile
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Koda
Commercial use
Ehretia acuminata is used for roadside plantings, building and furniture timber, as well as in Traditional Chinese medicine.
Local names
- Mandarin Chinese: 厚壳树 (hòu ké shù)
- Lao: ຊ້າງ ([sâːŋ])
- Nepali: नालसुरा (nalsura).
- Japanese: チシャノキ (chishanoki)
Further reading
- Floyd, A.G., Rainforest Trees of Mainland South-eastern Australia, Inkata Press 1989, ISBN 0-909605-57-2
External links
Media related to Ehretia acuminata at Wikimedia Commons
- acuminata @ eFloras.org
- Brown, Robert; Nees von Esenbeck, Christian Gottfried Daniel (1827). "Ehretia". Prodromus florae Novae Hollandiae et Insulae Van-Diemen :exhibens characteres plantarum /quas annis 1802-1805 per oras utriusque insulae collegit et descripsit Robertus Brown; insertis passim aliis speciebus, auctori hucusque cognitis, seu evulgatis, seu ineditis, praesertim Banksianis, in primo itinere navarchi Cook detectis. Norimbergae: Sumtibus L. Schrag. p. 353. Retrieved 2009-03-31.