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Croton hancei

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Kingdom
  
Family
  
Tribe
  
Crotoneae

Scientific name
  
Croton hancei

Order
  
Subfamily
  
Crotonoideae

Genus
  
Rank
  
Species

Croton hancei httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
Croton laevigatus, Croton cascarilloides, Croton guatemalensis, Croton alabamensis, Croton caudatus

Croton hancei , the Hong Kong croton, is a shrub or small tree, a species of Croton which is endemic to Tsing Yi Island, Hong Kong. In Hong Kong, it is a protected species under the Forestry Regulations Cap. 96A.

Croton hancei was discovered by H. F. Hance on Hong Kong Island in the 1850s and published by botanist George Bentham as a new species in Flora Hongkongensis in 1861. The species was not observed again until 21 February 1997, when staff of the Hong Kong Herbarium of the Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department found an "unknown" species on a steep slope woodland under the highest peak, Tsing Yi Peak, on Tsing Yi Island. After confirmation by experts from the South China Institute of Botany, the Hong Kong Croton was re-discovered after a gap of over a century.

The woodland measuring 1.05 hectares (2.6 acres) is considered to be a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) for the protection of the endemic Hong Kong croton.

Description

Croton hancei is a monoecious shrub or treelet, ca. 5  m tall; the branches glabrous, the oblong-lanceolate leaves are clustered at the stem apex on petioles 2-5  mm long, the leaf blade 8-18 × 2-5  cm, papery in texture, with both surfaces glabrous; the base is attenuate to obtuse, the margins entire or serrulate, and the apex acuminate.

The Inflorescences are terminal, ca. 3  cm, the bracts small. The male flowers are usually many per bract, the bud globose, ca. 2  mm in diameter, the petals narrow and small. The female flowers are usually solitary, at the base of the inflorescence. Fl. Jun-Aug.

References

Croton hancei Wikipedia


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