Qjure
HomeRemediesSearchJournal
Powered bySimilia
HomeRemediesSearchJournalAccount
Powered bySimilia
Qjure

The homeopathic encyclopedia. Explore remedies, read materia medica, and discover the classification system developed by Jan Scholten.

Platform

  • Remedies
  • Search
  • Journal
  • Membership

Legal

  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Terms

© 2026 Qjure. All rights reserved.

Powered bySimilia
Back to MonimiaceaeAll kingdoms

Wilkiea hugeliana

Kingdom
3Plants
Phylum
6Angiospermae
Class
2Magnolianae
Subclass
2Magnoliidae
Phase
5Laurales
Subphase
6Monimiaceae
Stage
3
Author

Qjure

Type

Info

Chapter

3-622.56.03

Book
Family
English: Common wilkiea; Tetra beech; Veiny wilkiea.
Genus: ± 12 species.
Region: Asia-Tropical, Malesia, New Guinea; eastern Australia, Queensland and New South Wales.
Habitat: understory of rainforests, volcanic soils.
BotanyShrubs or small tree; ± 8 meters high; dioecious.
Stem: trunk often crooked, irregular, not buttressed; bark smooth, brown, greyish, scaly on larger plants.
Leaves: opposite or verticillate, entire or serrate; ± 10 cm long, ± 3 cm wide,opposite, elliptic or oblong, toothed margins, rarely entire, rounded at the top, tapering at the stem, dark and glossy above, dull and paler underneath, leaf stalks are ± 8 mm long, very heavily and noticeably veined, particularly below the leaf;
Flowers: yellow, green, fragrant; fruit receptacle is shiny black, ± 10 mm in diameter, without a stalk, together on a tubular disk.
Seeds:white on the darker forest floor, after having been dropped by birds.
Pollination: by Thrips setipennis, a species of thrips.
  • 0 Kingdoms
  • ›3 Plants
  • ›6 Angiospermae
  • ›2 Magnolianae
  • ›2 Magnoliidae
  • ›5 Laurales
  • ›6 Monimiaceae