Paulownia is a genus of
angiosperm trees, and one of the fastest-growing trees in the world.
Paulownia tomentosa can grow over tall and has large heart shaped leaves ranging from wide and long with a -long
petiole. The leaves grow in opposite
decussate pairs, and as the name
tomentosa suggests, are covered in hairs. The leaf margin can be toothed or
entire and sometimes may be slightly lobed. They can be distinguished from common look-alike genera, such as
Catalpa and
Cercis, by secondary and tertiary
venation. The leaves are late to come in on the tree and late to fall from the typically
deciduous Paulownia. However, in tropical areas, the tree can be evergreen. The leaves are often preceded by pale violet to purple-shaded tubular flowers, similar to a
foxglove. Like most members of the Lamiales, the flowers are
zygomorphic. The
inflorescences are terminal erect -long
panicles of ~ long flowers. The thick, fused
calyx is covered by a brown hairy
indumentum, and the fused calyx tube is the same length as its calyx lobes, except in
P. catalpifolia and
P. elongata, in which the lobes are shorter than the calyx tubes. The
corolla has five fused lobes with a shorter
adaxial bilobed lip, and a somewhat longer
abaxial trilobed lower lip. The lips of all the petals are curled and their surface tomentose. On the inner side of the lower trilobed corolla tube run two light-yellow folded ridges from the calyx to the lip. They are interpreted as
floral guides to the top of the corolla tube. Inside the corolla tube, and approximately halfway down, are four
stamen filaments fused to the petals at the base, with two being longer than the others. At the bottom of the corolla tube is a short corolla-stamen tube. The base of the stamen filaments are bent so that they run along the upper portion of the flower with the arrow shaped
anthers then depositing pollen on the dorsal side of a variety of pollen-feeding insects. The superior
bilocular ovary, surrounded by the brown calyx, with its
stigma and
style rising up, is approximately the same length as the longer stamen filaments that surround it. That is left on the stem as the corolla and stamen fall off. The stigma tip has a singular small hole that leads to a tubular dilated chamber at the top of the style, covered in receptive papillae. In the species
P. kawakamii, the stigma tip is slightly bilobed, which is a unique morphological characteristic distinguishing
Paulownia from all of the Lamiales. At the bottom of the ovary is a
nectary, with nectary slits on the basal sides of the ovary, beneath a hairy region. The ovary then develops into a sticky green oval capsule tapered at the apex with the remaining dried up style sometimes still attached. The capsule remains on the persistent brown calyx where it can last on the tree through the rest of the year before turning brown and woody, and
loculicidal dehiscence reveals up to 2000 small winged seeds stacked tightly inside. The tiny seeds have lateral wings that gradually increase in length around the seed. The ventral and dorsal side of the seed are flat. The wing shape on the seeds is another characteristic distinguishing Paulownia from the rest of the Lamiales. The new buds, enclosed by the early brown fuzzy calyx, are visible in late summer to early fall and wait dormant, alongside the brown seed capsules, till spring. ==Fossil record==