Pennantia cunninghamii

Pennantia cunninghamii, known as the brown beech, is a rainforest tree of eastern Australia. The range of natural distribution is from Clyde Mountain near Batemans Bay in southern New South Wales (35° S) to Atherton in tropical Queensland (17° S).

Pennantia cunninghamii
Young Pennantia cunninghamii growing near Kiama, Australia
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Apiales
Family: Pennantiaceae
Genus: Pennantia
Species:
P. cunninghamii
Binomial name
Pennantia cunninghamii

The habitat is tropical or sub-tropical rainforest on fertile soils, particularly growing by streams in cooler areas. However, it can occasionally be seen on poorer soils such as at Watagans National Park. Or in temperate rainforests subject to cold weather, such as at Robertson, New South Wales. Identification is simple with the leaves and branchlets, as the zig-zagging pattern is prominent. The crooked leaning trunk is also characteristic.

Description

A medium to large tree, up to 30 metres tall with a stem diameter of 90 cm. The trunk is uneven, bumpy, leaning and crooked. The base of the stem is flanged. Bark is brown or dark grey.

Leaves form on zig-zagging branchlets, the branchlets have small brown dots. Leaves alternate, elliptic or egg shaped. 7 to 15 cm long, with a short point at the tip. Leaf veins are raised on the underside and more prominent than above.

White flowers form on panicles, 5 to 12 cm long. Individual flowers about 3 mm long with five petals 2 mm long each. Flowering occurs between November and January. The fruit is a black egg shaped drupe, 13 mm long with one seed inside. Fruit matures from October to July. Removal of the fleshy aril is recommended to assist seed germination, which occurs without difficulty.

Ecology

Its fruit is eaten by the grey-headed flying fox and a variety of bird species including: brown cuckoo dove, green catbird, topknot pigeon, wompoo fruit-dove and white-headed pigeon. The larva of the moth Cardamyla carinentalis pupates between leaves of Pennantia cunninghamii.[1]

gollark: Although in the modern era both will just be memetically cryoapiocooled.
gollark: Also true.
gollark: GTech™ actually used to use server racks for bee storage, which has the advantage of allowing easy colocation *and* interoperation with computing hardware.
gollark: As you can see, bees smart.
gollark: I do not have .

References

  • Floyd, A. G. (1989). Rainforest Trees of Mainland South-eastern Australia (1st ed.). Port Melbourne: Elsevier Australia - Inkata Imprint, copyright Forestry Commission of New South Wales (published 1989-12-01). p. 166. ISBN 0-909605-57-2. Retrieved 2009-06-10. (other publication details, included in citation)
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