Elaeocarpus thelmae is a species of flowering plant in the family Elaeocarpaceae and is endemic to north-east Queensland. It is a tree, often with buttress roots at the base of the trunk, egg-shaped to elliptic leaves with many hairy domatia, densely rusty-hairy flowers, and blackish, oval fruit.
Elaeocarpus thelmae is a tree that typically grows to a height of 35m (115feet), a dbh of and often with buttress roots at the base of the trunk. The leaves are elliptic to egg-shaped with the narrower end towards the base, long and wide on a slender petiole long. The leaves have many hairy domatia near vein junctions and have obscure serration on the edges. The flowers are borne in groups of between five and ten on a rachis long, each flower on a robust pedicel long. The flowers have four or five egg-shaped sepals long, wide and densely hairy on the back. The four or five petals are about the same size as the sepals with four to six lobes on the tip, and there are fifty to sixty densely-packed stamens. Flowering occurs in January and the fruit is an blackish, oval drupe long and wide, present from July to October.[1] [2]
Elaeocarpus thelmae was first formally described in 1984 by Bernard Hyland and Mark James Elgar Coode in the Kew Bulletin. [3]
Elaeocarpus thelmae grows in rainforest in a restricted area on the Windsor Tablelands and nearby areas of north-east Queensland, at altitudes of NaNm (-2,147,483,648feet).[2]
This quandong is listed as of "least concern" under the Queensland Government Nature Conservation Act 1992.[4]