Harpullia alata, commonly known as winged tulip or wing-leaved tulip, is a species of flowering plant in the family Sapindaceae, and is endemic to eastern Australia. It is a tree with paripinnate leaves, the leaflets elliptic with teeth on the edges, white flowers and capsules containing a seed with a yellow to reddish aril.
Harpullia alata is a tree that typically grows to a height of up to, its new growth covered with rusty hairs. Its leaves are paripinnate, long with 6 to 10 elliptic to lance shaped leaflets with the narrower end towards the base, mostly long and wide on a winged petiole long. The flowers are borne in racemes in leaf axils and are long. The sepals are long and covered with downy hairs, the petals are white and long, there are 8 stamens, and the ovary covered with soft hairs. The fruit is a sessile, broadly oval, yellowish capsule long containing two shiny chestnut brown seeds, nearly enclosed in a yellow to reddish aril.[1] [2] [3]
This is the only Australian Harpullia species that has dentate margins on the leaflets and wings on the leaf stem.[1]
Harpullia alata was first formally described in 1860 by Victorian government botanist Ferdinand von Mueller from a specimen collected by Dr Hermann Beckler "in woods" near the Clarence River in New South Wales.[4] The species epithet, alata, is a Latin adjective meaning "winged", and refers to the winged petiole. The type specimen is held at Kew (K) k000701234.
Winged tulip grows in rainforest at high altitudes in gullies and steep slopes from the McPherson Ranges in southern Qeensland where it is quite common, to the Clarence River in northern New South Wales.[1]