Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Taiwania

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Kingdom
  
Order
  
Genus
  
Taiwania

Higher classification
  
Cypress

Division
  
Pinophyta

Family
  
Scientific name
  
Taiwania cryptomerioides

Rank
  
Species

Taiwania Taiwania cryptomerioides Botany Photo of the Day

Similar
  
Chamaecyparis formosensis, Chinese fir, Chamaecyparis taiwanensis, Calocedrus formosana, Taiwan cunninghamia

Taiwania cryptomerioides formosa taiwanie


Taiwania (Taiwania cryptomerioides) is a large coniferous tree in the cypress family Cupressaceae, formerly listed in the segregate family Taxodiaceae. It is native to eastern Asia, growing in the mountains of central Taiwan, and locally in southwest China (Guizhou, Hubei, Sichuan, Yunnan, Tibet) and adjoining Myanmar, and northern Vietnam. It is endangered by illegal logging for its valuable wood in many areas. It is very likely that the range was more extensive in the past before extensive felling for the wood.

Contents

Taiwania Taiwania cryptomerioides Botany Photo of the Day

It is one of the largest tree species in Asia, reported to heights of up to 90 m tall and with a trunk up to 4 m diameter above buttressed base. The leaves are needle-like or awl-like and 8–15 mm long on young trees up to about 100 years old, then gradually becoming more scale-like, 3–7 mm long, on mature trees. The cones are small, 15–25 mm long, with about 15-30 thin, fragile scales, each scale with two seeds.

Taiwania Taiwania cryptomerioides Landscape Plants Oregon State University

The populations in mainland Asia are treated as a distinct species Taiwania flousiana by some botanists, but the claimed differences between these and the Taiwanese population are not consistent when a number of specimens from each area are compared.

The genus is named after the island of Taiwan, from where it first became known to the botanical community in 1910.

Taiwania httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

The wood is soft, but durable and attractively spicy scented, and was in very high demand in the past, particularly for temple building and coffins. The rarity of the tree and its slow growth in plantations means legal supplies are now very scarce; the species has legal protection in China and Taiwan.

Taiwania FileTaiwania cryptomerioides 2JPG Wikimedia Commons

Taiwania is also a journal that published by National Taiwan University.

taiwania cryptomerioides healing video


Taiwania Taiwania photo Taiwania cryptomerioides G59958 ARKive

Taiwania FileTaiwania cryptomerioides Villa Taranto Verbania DSC03814

References

Taiwania Wikipedia