Cerbera inflata, commonly known as the cassowary plum, grey milkwood, Joojooga, or rubber tree, is a plant in the family Apocynaceae endemic to northeast Queensland, specifically the Atherton Tablelands and adjacent areas.
The cassowary plum is a tree up to 30m (100feet) in height with a grey fissured trunk. Leaves are glabrous (smooth), lanceolate, dull green above and paler below, and crowded towards the end of the twigs. They measure from 10to long and 1.5to wide with 33 to 37 lateral veins. All parts of the tree produces a copious milky sap when cut.
The inflorescence is a much branched cyme up to 15abbr=onNaNabbr=on with usually more than 50 flowers. The flowers have 5 white sepals, a long corolla tube about 16abbr=onNaNabbr=on in length by wide with 5 free lobes at the end. They are white with a cream or green centre, about 10to in diameter, and have a sweet scent.
Fruits are a bright blue-purple drupe measuring about 7cm (03inches) long by 3cm (01inches) wide, slightly pointed and the end away from the pedicel (stem), with a single large seed.
This species was first described as Cerbera dilatata by the Australian botanist Stanley Thatcher Blake, and published in 1948 in the Proceedings of the Royal Society of Queensland. That name was subsequently found to be a nomen illegitimum as it had previously been applied to another plant in 1927. Thus, it was renamed and given its current combination in 1959.
The species epithet derives from the Latin inflatus, meaning 'inflated' and refers to the corolla tube.
There is potential confusion regarding the taxon C. dilatata. To clarify, C. dilatata Markgr. was first described in 1927, but has since been determined to be a synonym of C. odollam Gaertn. The subject of this article was originally described as C. dilatata S.T.Blake but was renamed in 1959 due to the earlier usage of that combination. Of these three taxa, only C. odollam and C. inflata are now considered legitimate. However, there are still many references and sightings labelled with C. dilatata, and any that occur outside Australia are likely to be C. odollam.
Cerbera inflata is endemic to Queensland. It grows in well developed rainforest in the foothills and uplands from Innisfail to the Atherton Tableland. The altitudinal range is from 100to.
Cassowaries eat the fallen fruit whole, and are the major dispersal agent for the species.