Syzygium floribundum F.Muell.

Tree to about 30 m tall in the wild, generally to 10 m in cultivation. Leaves lanceolate to narrowly elliptic, acuminate, 7-12 cm long, 2-4 cm wide, with 17-40 pairs of veins, mostly wavy-edged. Leaf stalk 2-7 mm long, reddish, flattened with a groove above. Fruit green at first, becoming pink or red,1.5-2 cm broad, globular or slightly flattened, with the remains of the calyx forming a hard tube 1-2 mm high on top; mostly Jan-Apr. Syn. Eugenia ventenatii Benth., Syzygium floribundum F. Muell.

Grows naturally along creeks and rivers of C and S Qld and N NSW.

Qld, NSW.

Leaves wavy-edged; calyx rim persistent, cylindrical, projecting; fruit hard, green becoming orange-red; in section the cotyledons form a wriggly (ruminate) seed with a dark centre.

VIC: Bendigo (RSL); Burnley (College grounds); Caulfield (Park, many); Fitzroy (Gds); Kew (Boroondara Cemetery); Korumburra (Primary School); Melbourne (Treasury Gds); Prahran (Victoria Gds); St Arnaud (Bot. Gds).

Source: Spencer, R. (2002). Myrtaceae. In: Spencer, R.. Horticultural Flora of South-eastern Australia. Volume 3. Flowering plants. Dicotyledons. Part 2. The identification of garden and cultivated plants. University of New South Wales Press. (as Waterhousea floribunda)

kingdom Plantae
phylum   Tracheophyta
class    Magnoliopsida
superorder     Rosanae
order      Myrtales
family       Myrtaceae
genus        Syzygium Gaertn.