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"Range of four species of the genus Falcatifolium" (de Laubenfels 1988). |
Falcatifolium de Laub. 1969 Common NamesTaxonomic notesSee Dacrydium. Key to the species (de Laubenfels (1988)):
Description"Dioecious shrubs to large trees to 36 m tall with thin more or less smooth brownish bark with scattered lenticels, reddish and somewhat fibrous within, breaking off in occasional flakes on larger specimens. Loosely and irregularly branched. Leaves spirally placed, single veined, and alternating with elongated appressed scales which are loosely clustered at the shoot apices to form foliar buds between episodes of growth. Seedling leaves narrowly lenticular, apiculate, bifacially flattened, giving way abruptly to distinct juvenile leaves in about the second year of growth. Juvenile and adult leaves distichous, bilaterally flattened and falcately curved away from the branch with the apex in most cases oppositely curved in the direction of shoot growth. Reproductive structures on short scaly shoots which are either axillary or terminal and may bear a few reduced leaves. Pollen cones cylindrical, solitary or clustered; microsporophyll a small acuminate spur above the two pollen sacs. Seed-bearing structures solitary, consisting of up to about a dozen large acuminate scales which become greatly swollen, red, and fleshy when mature; normally one subapical scale fertile with a cup-shaped epimatium which has a distinct hump opposite the base of the included seed positioned well beyond the subtending fleshy scale so that the solitary seed and its basal humped epimatium are fully exposed; the inverted ovule gradually turning upward as it matures into a nearly erect seed; the mature seed with two lateral weak ridges along its wider sides which come together in an apical ridge, otherwise the seed is more or less egg-shaped. "Obviously related to Dacrydium but differing in the dimorphic foliage with specialized fertile shoots and the exposed hump of the epimatium opposite the base of the seed. In Dacrydium the base of the seed lies close to its attachment and is always well covered by the subtending bract." (de Laubenfels 1988). RangeNew Caledonia; New Guinea; Moluccas (Obi I.); N. & Central Celebes; Philippines (Mindoro); Borneo; Riouw-Lingga Archipelago (Lingga); Malaya (de Laubenfels 1988). Big TreeOldestDendrochronologyEthnobotanyObservationsRemarksSee Also | |||||||||||||||||||
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