Stem and leaves Tawari is a small tree of up to 10 m high with a spreading crown. The trunk is usually between 2–4 dm in diameter, and covered by a thick grayish brown bark that acts as a buffer. Young branches have few flat-lying pale unicellular T-hairs, while the
peduncles,
pedicels,
sepals and
petals are thickly covered in such hairs, giving them a felty look. The leaves are alternately positioned along the stem and often almost create a whorl at the end of a growth period, with the bud at the end covered in stout triangular scales. These
scales have entire margins fringed with simple single celled hairs. The first leaves to appear when growth recommences are an intermediate series between schales and full leaves.
Stipules at the base of the leaf stem are absent. The
leaf stalk is stout, fleshy and about 2 cm long. The somewhat fleshy and distinctly leathery simple leaf blades are yellowish to dark green on top and pale green beneath and measure 6-16 × 1–4 cm, are lanceolate to elliptic in shape, while the widest point may be at or beyond midlength, with a pointy tip, and the edges are coarsely serrated. A small gland is present at the tip of each tooth. Young leaves are often reddish and have rolled-in margins. Leaves on young shoots may be relatively narrower. Old leaves discolor to orange or red.
Flowers Flower buds are formed in March and April and these open from October to the end of December varying according to location and altitude. The
inflorescence sits at the end of the branches in an umbel-like
panicle that consists of five to fifteen flowers. Each flower is
hermaphrodite,
starsymmetric, 2—3 cm in diameter and produces copious amounts of nectar, but apparently does not emit a scent. The five
sepals are broadly oval, covered in downy hairs and 5–6 mm long. The five
petals are
overlapping in the bud, white, felty, spoon-shaped with a narrow base (or claw). The
claw is 1-2 cm long and is inserted on a 5-lobed disc. The five stamens extend well beyond the corolla and alternate with the five lobes of the disc at the centre of the flower. The filaments are very long and white. The
anthers are connected to the filaments midlength and open in lengthwise slits towards the middle of the flower. Pollen grains have five slits. The nectar is produced by the ledges of the disc, just above the petal implant. The five styles that rise from the disc are sometimes free from each other at their based and are twisting and fused higher up.
Fruit and seed The fruit is a leathery
capsule, broadly oval in shape. These contain five spaces that split open outwards from the base of the style when the fruit is ripe by April. Each space contains two shiny black seeds that are shaped like a slightly curved tear drop of 6×3 mm, and are partly covered by a conspicuous scarlet
aril that acts as a visual and tactile cue for birds to locate the seeds. Both of the seeds and the aril starkly contrast with the white inside of the fruit (or
mericarp). Aborted seeds are greyish. The embryo is green.
Ixerba has fifty
chromosomes (2n = 50). == Taxonomy ==