Elaeocarpus coorangooloo, commonly known as brown quandong or Coorangooloo quandong, is a species of flowering plant in the family Elaeocarpaceae and is endemic to north-east Queensland in Australia. It is a tree with elliptic leaves, white flowers with lobed petals, and spherical fruit.
Elaeocarpus coorangooloo is a tree with elliptic leaves about long and wide with wavy edges. Old leaves turn red before falling. The flowers have sepals less than long and petals long with thin lobes at the tip, and there are between fifteen and twenty stamens. The fruit is a more or less spherical drupe about long and wide.[1]
Elaeocarpus coorangooloo was first formally described in 1917 by John Frederick Bailey and Cyril Tenison White in the Botany Bulletin of the Department of Agriculture, Queensland, from material collected by H.W. Mocatta in the Atherton district.[2]
Elaeocarpus coorangooloo is endemic to north-east Queensland in Australia, where it is only known from the Windsor Tableland and near Paluma, growing in dry rainforest at altitudes of NaNm (-2,147,483,648feet).[1]
Brown quandong is listed as 'near threatened' under the Queensland Government Nature Conservation Act 1992.[3]