Ocotea foetens is
endemic to
Macaronesia. Like the other species of the genus
Ocotea, it is rich in essential oils, which give an unpleasant odor to the wood when freshly cut (hence the name
foetens,
Latin for
smelly, stinky, disgusting, or unpleasant). It is rarely used as an ornamental. It is an
evergreen tree, generally up to in height, although some specimens may reach . It commonly grows with multiple trunks branched from the base. The bark is rough and irregular, and dark in colour; the young branches are angular, with smooth bark, sometimes reddish in areas of recent growth. The
wood is dark and hard. The
leaves are about long and wide,
oblong-lanceolate to almost elliptical, acuminate at the apex and slightly indented at the base. In adult plants, the leaves are leathery in texture, glossy on both sides, darker green on the upper surface, with 2(-4) small gland-like depressions on the underside near the base. The
petioles are short (up to in length). The
flowers of both sexes are white, with splashes of green and pale yellow, releasing a slight odor. The
perianth has six components, and there are nine stamens. The predominant flowering season is from June to August (northern hemisphere). The
fruit is a
berry, hard and fleshy and about long, its lower half covered by a dome, giving it a look similar to an
acorn. The fruit is dark green, gradually darkening with maturity. The fruit has a single seed wrapped in a hard coat. When the fruits fall they separate from the dome. Germination is favored by moisture and light. ==Ecology==