The
fruiting bodies of
Paraconcavistylon wehrii are simple
racemes that taper from a wide base down to a tip under wide, with lengths of up to and over . Fruit capsules are born on
pedicels which curve upwards towards the raceme apex in a helical pattern and the longest preserved raceme has 33 attached fruits, though the specimen is missing both basal and apical sections. Given the length of the racemes, they likely hung down like a pendulum, with the fruits pointing downwards. Each of the smooth teardrop shaped fruits is between wide by tall. They have a slight thickening in the basal area where a ring of
perianth scars encircling the connection with the pedicel is, but are widest near the fruit apex. Between four and six long persistent styles are arranged just below the midpoint of the capsules and curving upwards towards the capsule apex. At the base of each style are swollen elliptical bulges that likely were
nectaries. The fruits opened at the apex, with a four to six rayed star pattern formed by the
dehiscence splits which run from just above the styles to the fruit apex where they join together.
P. wehrii twigs have alternating leaves with terminal and
axillary buds. The raceme is born from a
fork of the twig and leaf, as are the pointed buds. Typically the axillary buds are around long by while the terminal buds are larger at long by . Encircling the twig are between five and eight distinct terminal bud scars. The leaves have a narrow base connecting to the long petioles. They have regularly spaced teeth along the margin that are rounded and bearing glands, and a few specimens from the McAbee site also have distinct laminal lobes bracketing the petiole. The leaves have an overall range between long by , with an obovate outline. Like
Trochodendron the leaves have a pinnate vein structure, with between eight and fifteen secondary veins that fork from the central main vein and arch towards the leaf apex before merging with the secondary above. ==References==