List of largest plants


This is a list of the largest plants by clade. Measurements are based on height, volume, length, diameter, and weight, depending on the most appropriate way of measurement for the clade.

[Gymnosperm]s (Gymnospermae)

Conifers (Pinopsida)

The conifer division of plants includes the tallest organism, and the largest single-stemmed plants by wood volume, wood mass, and main stem circumference. The largest by wood volume and mass is the giant sequoia, native to Sierra Nevada and California; it grows to an average height of and in diameter. Specimens have been recorded up to in height and in diameter; the largest individual still standing is the General Sherman Tree, with a volume of.
Although typically not so large in volume, the closely related coast redwood of the Pacific coast in North America is taller, reaching a maximum height of ; the Hyperion Tree, which ranks it as the world's tallest known living tree and organism. The largest historical specimen was the Lindsay Creek Tree, a coast redwood with a minimum trunk volume of over and a mass of over. It fell during a storm in 1905.
The conifers also include the largest tree by circumference in the world, the Montezuma cypress. The thickest recorded tree, found in Mexico, is called Árbol del Tule, with a circumference of at its base and a diameter of at above ground level; its height is over. See list of superlative trees for other tree records.

Cycads (Cycadophyta)

The largest single-stemmed species of cycad is Hope's cycad, endemic to the Australian state of Queensland. The largest examples of this species have been over tall and have had a circumference of.
However the multi-stemmed Encephalartos laurentianus of Bandundu Province in Congo (Kinshasa) and in adjoining parts of Angola is much more massive. The stems, which can be upright when young, but sprawling when mature, are up to long, and up to diameter. Assuming a density of 1.0, an old much-branched specimen could weigh up to 45 tonnes.

Flowering plants (Angiospermae)

This is the most diverse and numerous division of plants, with upwards of 400,000 species.

Clonal colonies

For two-dimensional area, the largest known clonal flowering plant, and indeed largest plant and organism, is a grove of male Aspen in Utah, nicknamed Pando. The grove is connected by a single root system, and each stem above the ground is genetically identical. It is estimated to weigh approximately, and covers.
A form of flowering plant that far exceeds Pando as the largest organism on earth in breadth, is the giant marine plant, Posidonia australis, living in Shark Bay, Australia. Its length is about and it covers an area of. It is estimated to be over 4,500 years old. Believed to have sprouted from a single seed, it grows at about the same rate as a lawn, up to a year.
Another form of flowering plant Posidonia oceanica discovered in the Mediterranean may be the oldest living organism in the world, with an estimated age of 100,000 years.

"Individual" plants

By a stricter definition of individuality, and using contending measures of size, Ficus benghalensis, the giant banyan trees of India are the largest trees in the world. In these trees, a network of interconnected stems and branches has grown entirely by vegetative, "branching" propagation. One individual, Thimmamma Marrimanu, in Andhra Pradesh, covers 19,107 square metres, making it the largest single tree by two-dimensional canopy coverage area. This tree is also the world's largest known tree by a related measure, perimeter length, with a distance of 846 metres required to walk around the edge of the canopy. Thimmama Marrimanu is likely also the world's largest tree by three-dimensional canopy volume.
The tallest flowering plant species known is Eucalyptus regnans, of which a living specimen has been measured at in Southern Tasmania. The longest vine to be accurately measured is "Rattan Manau" of the palm family and native to the Malay Peninsula, Sumatra and Java. One unbranched stem at Buitenzorg Botanic Garden, Java was carefully measured to a length of.
Of herbaceous plants, plants without persistent woody growth above ground, Musa ingens is the largest. It can reach about 15 m tall with a pseudostem diameter of around a meter. It also holds the record for the longest petioles or leaf stalks of any plant.
Bamboos are a subfamily of flowering perennial plants in the grass family Poaceae, comprising three tribes: Arundinarieae, Bambuseae, and Olyreae. Dendrocalamus is a tropical genus of giant clumping bamboo found throughout Southeast Asia. It includes Dendrocalamus giganteus, which can reach heights up to 30 m.
List of [world records held by plants|Other records] among flowering plants include, the title of largest flower, which belongs to the species Rafflesia arnoldii. One of these flowers can reach a diameter of and weigh up to. The largest unbranched inflorescence, resembling a giant flower, belongs to the titan arum, reaching almost in height. The absolute largest inflorescence, at up to long, is borne by the talipot palm of India. The largest leaves belong to either Gunnera manicata, Raphia regalis, Manicaria saccifera, Marojejya darianii, Johannesteijsmannia altifrons, or Victoria boliviana, depending on criteria.

Pteridophyta

Horsetails (Equisetopsida)

The largest of horsetail is the species Equisetum myriochaetum, native to Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru and Mexico. The biggest specimen known was tall and had a diameter of.

Ferns (Pteridopsida)

The largest species of fern is probably Cyathea brownii of Norfolk Island, which may be or more in height.

Bryophytes

Liverworts (Marchantiophyta)

The largest species of liverwort is a New Zealand species, Schistochila appendiculata. The top size of this species is long, a diameter of and a stem length of. Another New Zealand liverwort, Plagiochila gigantea, is a cushion plant up to wide and up to height. It is endemic to the Southern Alps of South Island.

Mosses (Bryophyta">Bryophyte">Bryophyta)

The world's most massive moss is Dawsonia superba, of Australia and New Zealand. This species has numerous tall, upright shoots, joined by a network of rhizomes. The tallest moss is Spiridens reinwardtii of the family Hypnodendraceae and native to Indonesia, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Melanesia and Taiwan. S. reinwardtii is a vine which is typically high but can climb to a height of. Spiridens reinwardtii is the only true vine among mosses and climbs by twining. The longest individuals seem to be in New Guinea.