Podocarpus gnidioides (Schmid 1981). Detail drawing from de Laubenfels (1972).
Distribution, redrawn from de Laubenfels (1972). |
Podocarpus gnidioides Carrière 1867Common NamesTaxonomic notesHolotype : Mueller 70 (P) (de Laubenfels 1972).
Description"Horizontally, spreading out shrub to 2 m in height. Bark thin, fibrous, brown/reddish to brown/yellowish inside, changing to gray with age. Bud small, terminal, globular 1 mm thick with 1-2 lateral scales 2 mm long. Leaves dense, thick and spreading around the branches, linear 8-22 mm long by 2-2.5 mm wide, a little bit longer on juvenile leaves, apex round and dull. Leaves gradually becoming narrower towards the base almost like a leafstalk, decurrent, strongly undulate leaf margins, midrib grooved on upper surface, slightly raised on lower surface. Pollen cone 8-14 mm long by 2-2.5 mm in diameter, single on a naked peduncle 2-4mm long, surrounded at the base with several thin, rounded scales. Microsporophylls with a sharply pointed apex, barely leaving the pollen sac. Fruit on a short peduncle about 1mm long, receptacle formed from 2 thick bracts 3-7 mm long, with the tip spreading and not thicken, becoming fleshy and bright red at maturity. Seeds oval 6-7 mm long by 3.5 mm in diameter, surface wrinkled, dorsal edge prominent, becoming a clear ridge along the axis" (de Laubenfels 1972). RangeNew Caledonia: on the southern part of the main island above 600 m elevation on rocky ridges in the mountains (personal observations, Ferenc Kiss # 183 (January 16, 1993) on the summit of Mt. Humboldt, 1600m.) Other Podocarpus that can be found in similar setting include P. alpinus from Australia and P. nivalis from New Zealand. Big TreeOldestDendrochronologyEthnobotanyObservationsde Laubenfels (1972) examined collections from the following sites, some of which have likely been eradicated: Mt. Koghis, 900-1070m (8 coll.); Mt. Dore, 600-775m (7 coll.); Mt. Humboldt, 1400-1600 m (6 coll.); Mt. Dzumac, 1000m (2 coll.); Mts. Comboui, 1060m; Mt. des Sources, 1000m; Mt. Nekandi (Thio), 1300m; Ouenghi, 400-800m; and Mt. Mou (no elev. specified). RemarksCitationsThanks to Ferenc Kiss for translating de Laubenfels from the French (Feb-2003). See AlsoCarrière, Traité Conif. ed. 2 : 656 (1867). Dallimore and Jackson. 1923. Handbook Coniferae: 46. Gray, N.E. 1956. Journ. Arnold Arbor. 37: 169. Pilger. 1903, in Engler, Pflanzenreich 4(5): 82. Pilger. 1926, in Engler, Nat. Pflanzenfam.ed. 2, 13: 247. Sarlin. 1954. Bois et Forêts Nouv. Caléd.: 95, tab. 32. Schlechter. 1907. Bot. Jahrb. 39: 16. back | Podocarpus | Podocarpaceae | home This page is from the Gymnosperm Database
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