Noronhia


Noronhia emarginata


Plant Characteristics
Habit   tree

Lifespan: perennial
Origin: Madagascar
Cultivation
Features: evergreen, deciduous
Scientific Names

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Noronhia >

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Noronhia is a genus of 41 species of flowering plants in the family Oleaceae, all but one native to Madagascar, the remaining species native to the Comoros Islands north of Madagascar.[1]

The species are deciduous or evergreen trees.

The genus is named in after the Spanish Botanist Francisco Noronha.


Read about Noronhia in the Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture 

Noronhia (after Ferd. de Noronha, Spanish naturalist and traveler: died 1787). Oleaceae. One tree or large bush, differing from Olea in having separate petals and in other characters. N. emarginata, Poir. (Olea emarginata, Lam.), is native in Madagascar and other islands, and is planted somewhat in Hawaii. Lvs. opposite, evergreen, short-stalked, coriaceous, cuneate-oblong and more or less retuse, entire: fls. yellowish, fragrant, in axillary clusters; calyx small, 4-toothed or -cut; petals 4, sometimes somewhat coherent at base: fr. an edible drupe, purple when ripe, globular, about 1 in. diam.; seed usually 1 (ovary 2-celled), in the sweet pulp.


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Cultivation

Propagation

Pests and diseases

Species

Madagascar[2]
Comoros[3]

Gallery

References

  1. University of Oxford, Oleaceae information site: Noronhia
  2. Madagascar Catalogue: Noronhia
  3. Labat, J.-N., Pignal, M., & Pascal, O. (1999). Trois Espèces Nouvelles d'Oleaceae et Note sur la Présence d'Olea capensis dans l'Archipel des Comores. Novon 9 (1): 66-72. Abstract

External links