Palaquium galactoxylum
Palaquium galactoxylum, commonly known as Cairns pencil cedar, Daintree maple or red silkwood, is a species of plants in the star apple family Sapotaceae which is endemic to rainforests of New Guinea and northern Australia. It can produce spectacularly large buttress roots.
Description
Palaquium galactoxylum is a rainforest tree growing up to high, thus becoming an emegent within the forest ecosystem. It has a very straight cylindrical trunk marked with conspicuous vertical lines of lenticels, usually reaching a diameter of, but it can grow to. It often produces very large buttress roots up to high according to official documentation, but specimens have been sighted with much larger buttresses. The trunk, branches and leaves all exude a milky sap when cut. It is semi-deciduous, dropping its leaves for a short period around October.The leaf-bearing twigs are scarred and rough looking; young twigs and new shoots are clothed in fine brown hairs. Leaves are glabrous and clustered towards the end of the twigs. They are rounded at the tip and cuneate at the base, and measure up to long by wide. The short petiole is about long.
The inflorescences are axillary, produced on the leaf-bearing twigs below the leaves. The fruits are a creamy-white ellipsoid drupe about long by wide. They contain one or sometimes two seeds measuring up to.
Taxonomy
The taxonomy of this species has a somewhat convoluted history with a number of authors describing it and assigning various names. The name currently accepted by most authorities is Palaquium galactoxylum H.J.Lam, with combinations by Henri Ernest Baillon, Cyril Tenison White, Pieter van Royen, George Bentham, and even a second description published by Ferdinand von Mueller all being discarded.In Australian botany, the species' accepted name is Palaquium galactoxylon.