Callitris baileyi
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Callitris baileyi | |
|---|---|
| At Australian Botanic Garden Mount Annan | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Plantae |
| Clade: | Tracheophytes |
| Clade: | Gymnospermae |
| Division: | Pinophyta |
| Class: | Pinopsida |
| Order: | Cupressales |
| Family: | Cupressaceae |
| Genus: | Callitris |
| Species: | C. baileyi |
| Binomial name | |
| Callitris baileyi C.White | |
Callitris baileyi is a species of conifer in the family Cupressaceae. It is found only in Australia, more specifically Southeast Queensland.[2] Its common name is Bailey's cypress-pine. The name is dedicated to Australian botanist Frederick Manson Bailey, who was the first to collect specimens of this tree. Bailey's name is closely associated with much of the flora of Queensland and their elucidation in southeastern Queensland.[3] Over the past few decades the conifer has been severely threatened by habitat loss. Fruiting for the species has been recorded year-round.[4]

Callitris baileyi is a slender tree growing to a height of 18m with rough greyish looking bark, and with a green crown.[4] The adult leaves are green with an average size of 25 mm long,[3] which are arranged in groups of three that run parallel with the stem. The branchlets have a grooved appearance due to the base of the leaves running down the stem as a wing.[4] Cones form on slender fruiting branchlets that are solitary and separated from one another.[3] Both the male and female cones form on the same tree, with the male cones appearing on the end of branchlets at a size of 2–3 mm long, while the female cone forms on a branchlet that has a waxy, greyish-blue coloring during its development.[4] The female cone is oblong in shape and measures 10–13 mm in diameter. The cones are covered in scales that alternate and are short and narrow.[3] The central stalk of the cone is short, narrow at the base and slightly angled. The seeds produced are few in number, with only two unequal wings.[4]
