Exocarpos cupressiformis
Native Cherry
Native Cherry
Wikipedia links: Angiosperms > Eudicots > Rosids > Santalales > Santalaceae > Exocarpos cupressiformis
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Common name: Native Cherry
Also cherry ballart, and cypress cherry
Conservation status: . . .
Etymology:
Occasionally the genus name is spelt "Exocarpus" but it appears to be mostly no longer in use
The original name Exocarpos is from the Latin meaning outside fruit
Flowers:
Its inconspicuous flowers are arranged in clusters on short spikes 3–6 mm long
Only one flower on each spike eventually forms a fruit
Fruit:
The inedible fruit is a globular, hard, greenish nut, 4-6mm long, containing one seed
It is found on top of a short stalk, the pedicel
As the fruit develops the stalk swells to 5-6mm in diameter and turns yellow or red, to form the edible "cherry" (which lacks the hard stone of a European cherry)
The true, seed-like fruit (actually a nut containing the seed, like the acorn) is found on the outside of the fleshy false "fruit" ( swollen pedicel)
Dispersal of the species is by birds attracted to the colourful pedicel to which the nut is attached
The digestive juices of the bird weaken the hard nut, allowing the internal seed to germinate more easily
Propagation of the species has proved to be difficult
Leaves:
The leaves are reduced to small scales
The green, drooping stems are the site of photosynthesis.
Stem & branches:
Roots:
Habit:
The cherry ballart superficially resembles the cypress
It is a large shrub or small tree, 3 to 8 m tall, often pyramidal in shape
It is hemiparasitic on the roots of other trees
Habitat:
Plants are found in sclerophyll forest, especially in shallow soils, and on granite outcrops in eastern Australia
Distribution:
It is a species endemic to Australia
Their extensive habitat range is from Queenslandto Victoria, from the coast to the leeward fringe of the Great Dividing Range, and Tasmania
In more southerly parts of South Australia plants are found in a number of isolated pockets of forest including in a band from the Mount Lofty Ranges, down the Fleurieu Peninsula to Kangaroo Island, in the southern parts of the Yorke Peninsula and the Eyre Peninsula and in the Mount Remarkable National Park area
Additional notes:
It belongs to the sandalwood family of plants.
The foliage is anecdotally reported to be toxic to stock, however authoritative sources make no mention of such toxicity, and the browse lines indicate it is readily consumed by herbivores
Parasitism
There are no authoritative published accounts of its host plants or parasitism, the following notes are based on anecdotal accounts
In the early stages of development especially, and like many other members of the Santalaceae, the plants are hemiparasitic on the roots of other trees, particularly – hence the usefulness of shallow soils to establish this parasitism
More mature plants are less reliant on this parasitism once photosynthesis in their stems is well established
Uses
Indigenous Australians used the wood of the plant to make spearthrowers as well as bull roarers
The pale wood is very fine-grained with little figure but often striking colour variation. The timber was historically used for making furniture, gun-stocks, and tool handles
It is also suitable for carving and turning and so is also now used for producing decorative and ornamental pieces of art-work in the Arts and Crafts industries.[2]
The fleshy pedicel, the "cherry", is edible and so was used as food by indigenous Australians and by early European settlers
The "fruit" is picked when it is so ripe it is ready to fall from the tree
It may be eaten raw, or cooked
The 1889 book 'The Useful Native Plants of Australia’ records that Indigenous Australians in Queensland referred to this plant as "Tchimmi-dillen" or "Coo-yie" and that "The fruit is edible. The nut is seated on the enlarged succulent pedicel. This is the poor little fruit of which so much has been written in English descriptions of the peculiarities of the Australian flora. It has been likened to a cherry with the stone outside (hence the vernacular name) by some imaginative person."
Early European settlers used branches as Christmas tree
Sources of information: