Botanical name:Myristica magnificaFamily:Myristicaceae (Nutmeg family) Synonyms: Myristica fatua var magnifica
Magnificent Nutmeg is a tree, often buttressed, up
to 20 m tall, with stilt roots and knee roots. Branchlets are round,
stout, rusty velvet-hairy. Sap is red from cut end of bark, profuse.
Leaves are simple, alternate, carried on stalks 2-4 cm long, stout,
channelled, velvety when young, later hairless. Leaf-blade is 20-60
x10-15 cm, elliptic-oblong, tip pointed with blunt tip or long-pointed,
base rounded or flat, margin entire, thickly leathery, glossy above,
densely rusty velvety below, later hairless. Midrib is raised above,
secondary nerves 12-18 pairs, impressed above. Flowers are unisexual,
dioecious, urn-shaped, rusty orange in color. Male flowers are borne in
clusters of 10-20 flowers on woody stalks, Female flowers are borne 2
or 3 fascicled in leaf axils. Capsule is 10.5 x 5-7, oblong-ovoid,
densely rusty velvety, seed one, cylindrical, covered with bright
orange-red lacerated aril. Magnificent Nutmeg is endemic to the Western
Ghats.
Identification credit: G. Rao, Shrikant Ingalhalikar
Photographed in Katlikan, Karnataka.
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The flower labeled Magnificent Nutmeg is ...