Elaeocarpus arnhemicus, commonly known as elaeocarpus,[1] blue plum, bony quandony or Arnhem Land quandong,[2] is species of flowering plant in the family Elaeocarpaceae and is native to northern Australia, New Guinea, Timor and certain other islands in the Indonesian Archipelago. It is a tree with narrow elliptic to lance-shaped or egg-shaped leaves with serrated edges, racemes of white or cream-coloured flowers and metallic blue fruit.
Elaeocarpus arnhemicus is a tree. Although it was once believed to often grow as a shrub and only grow to a height of with a DBH of up to,[1] [2] [3] [4] it is now known that it can become a much larger plant, to 40m high.[5]
The leaves are narrow elliptic to lance-shaped or egg-shaped, long and wide with serrations on the edges, on a petiole long. The flowers are arranged in racemes up to long, each flower on a pedicel up to long. The sepals are ovate, long and wide. The petals are obovate, white or cream-coloured, long and wide, the tip with 7-12 linear lobes. Both the petals and sepals are usually only long. There are between fifteen and eighteen, sometimes up to twenty, stamens and the style is long and glabrous. Flowering occurs from January to July and the fruit is an elliptical, metallic blue drupe long and wide.[1] [2] [3] [5]
This species is best identified among other Elaeocarpus species when in flower.[5]
Elaeocarpus arnhemicus was first formally described in 1868 by Ferdinand von Mueller in his book Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae.[6] [7]
It is placed in the Fissipetalum group of Elaeocarpus species.[5]
Blue plum grows in riparian rainforest and some other habitats in the northern part of the Northern Territory, Cape York Peninsula, north-east Queensland and New Guinea at altitudes up to above sea level.[4] In 2001 the known range was expanded to Java, Timor, Flores, Sumba and Sulawesi. After receiving some new specimens, M. J. E. Coode, expert Elaeocarpus taxonomist, realised that a few old specimens from two collection localities that he and his colleague Raymond Weibel had never been able to identify, were actually E. arnhemicus, considerably expanding its range.[5]