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''Eugenia candolleana'' or Rainforest Plum is a tree native from Atlantic rainforest of Brazil, known locally by the Portuguese names ''cambuí roxo'' ("purple cambuí") or ''murtinha'' ("little myrtle").〔 It is quite rare in the wild, and has seen limited use in landscaping for its bright green foliage and purple-black fruits. The species is named after the 19th century Swiss botanist Augustin Pyramus de Candolle.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Plant Names C - F )〕 The Portuguese name ''cambuí'' means "thin-branched tree" in Tupi-Guarani language, and is applied to over 100 different species. == Description== The adult tree is 3–6 m tall,〔 with rounded or conical canopy up to 2 m wide. New leaves are rusty-brown, turning yellow and then deep dark green. The reddish-brown bark peels off naturally showing a smooth reddish trunk. Leaves are simple, in opposite pairs, with smooth leathery texture, smooth edges, and the apex curved downwards. Flowers are borne from November through January; they come in groups of 20 or more stalks, each bearing two flowers, sprouting from the base of leaf stalks.〔''(EUGENIA CANDOLLEANA E MYRCIARIA FLORIBUNDA )'' at the Frutas Raras site (in Portuguese). Accessed on 2012-02-27.〕 Fruits mature between February and March. The ripe fruit is a round or slightly elongated berry, up to 20 mm wide and 25 mm long. It has a thin purple-black skin and a wet, firm, whitish pulp about 3–5 mm thick, surrounding a loose single (rarely double) seed. It is edible, moderately sweet, with an aroma similar to (but less intense than) that of the jabuticaba.〔Trade Winds Fruit, (Rainforest Plum, ''Eugenia candolleana'' a.k.a Cambuí ). Accessed on 2012-02-27.〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Eugenia candolleana」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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