Free-Flowering Litsea is a tree, up to 15 m tall,
bark 8-10 mm thick, light brown, smooth, brittle, warty; lenticels
horizontal; blaze dull yellow; branchlets brown to black velvet-hairy.
Leaves are simple, alternate, estipulate; leaf-stalk 10-15 mm long,
stout, velvet-hairy; blade 7.5-28 x 3.7-10.5 cm, elliptic,
obovate-oblong, elliptic-oblong or ovate-oblong, base pointed, tip
pointed, or tapering, margin entire, hairless above except midrib above
and rusty woolly beneath, leathery; lateral nerves 10-15 pairs,
pinnate, prominent; intercostae subscalariform, prominent. Flowers
unisexual, in in leaf-axils racemose umbellule; flower-cluster-stalk
upto 1 mm long, silky velvet-hairy; bracts 4, round, silky woolly;
flowers 6-8 in an umbellule; perianth tube top-shaped, silky woolly,
lobes 6; stamens 12, in 4 rows; filaments hairy, those of rows 1 and 2
usually eglandular, those of rows 3 and 4 with 2-glands; anthers
4-celled, introrse; staminodes in female flowers as the stamens of
males but those of the outer rows club-shaped or linear, those of the
inner rows subulate and 2 glandular; ovary half inferior, stigma
capitate. Fruit a berry, 12-18 mm long, oblong, seated on a top-shaped
perianth tube. Free-Flowering Litsea is endemic to the Western Ghats.
Identification credit: Siddarth Machado
Photographed in Talakavery Wildlife Sanctuary, Karnataka.
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The flower labeled Free-Flowering Litsea is ...