familyCupressaceae
genusCallitris
Show Lower Taxa
Callitris
Dec. Gen. Nov. 10. 1808.
Common names: Cypress-pine
Etymology: Greek callos, beautiful, and treis, three, referring to the beauty of the plants and the three-whorled leaves and cone scales
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 2.
Revision as of 18:22, 26 July 2019 by FNA>Volume Importer
Shrubs or trees evergreen. Branchlets angled or furrowed-cylindrical, variously oriented. Leaves in whorls of 3–5. Adult leaves scalelike, appressed, abaxial surface keeled or rounded, free portion to 1 mm, abaxial glands absent. Pollen cones solitary or in small clusters, with 4–15 whorls of sporophylls, each with 2–4 pollen-sacs. Seed-cones maturing in 1–2 years, of 1–2 sizes, often remaining unopened for many years, ovoid or globose, 1–3.5 cm; scales persistent, in 2 equally inserted whorls of 3 (–4), valvate, rhombic-deltate, basifixed, thick and woody. Seeds 2–9 per scale, round or 3-angled, broadly 1–3-winged; cotyledons 2.
Distribution
North America, Australia, and New Caledonia.
Discussion
Species 16 (1 naturalized in the flora).