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Pittosporum

Pittosporum is a genus of about 250 species of flowering plants in the family Pittosporaceae. Plants in the genus Pittosporum are shrubs or trees with leaves arranged alternately along the stems. The flowers are arranged singly or in cymes, with white to yellow petals fused at the base forming a short tube, with stamens that are free from each other. The fruit is a capsule with a single locule that opens to reveal angular seeds.

Description
Plants in the genus Pittosporum are shrubs or trees, occasionally spiny, with smooth-edged linear to lance-shaped or egg-shaped leaves with the narrower end towards the base, on a petiole. The flowers are borne on the ends of branches or in leaf axils, in cymes or clusters with sepals that are free from each other. The petals are linear or lance-shaped with the narrower end towards the base, and partly fused to form a tube. The anthers are shorter than the filaments and open by two longitudinal slits. The fruit is a woody or leathery capsule containing seeds immersed in a sticky fluid. ==Taxonomy==
Taxonomy
The genus Pittosporum was first formally described in 1788 by Joseph Gaertner in De Fructibus et Seminibus Plantarum from an unpublished description by Joseph Banks. The genus name (Pittosporum) is made from the Greek words πίττα (pίtta) 'pitch, tar' and σπόρος (spóros) 'seed', so 'pitch seed', referring to the viscid fluid surrounding the seeds. ==Distribution==
Distribution
Plants in the genus Pittosporum are native to some parts of southern Africa, Madagascar, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Pakistan, India, some parts of China, Korea, Japan, Southeast Asia, New Guinea, Australia, New Zealand, and some Pacific Islands. ==Selected species==
Selected species
'' (Pittosporum phillyreoides) '' (Pittosporum tobira) • Pittosporum aliferum Tirel & Veillon • Pittosporum angustifoliumPittosporum artense Guillaumin • Pittosporum bicolorPittosporum brevispinumPittosporum ceylanicumPittosporum coccineumPittosporum collinumPittosporum coriaceumPittosporum cornifolium – tāwhiri karo • Pittosporum crassifolium – karo • Pittosporum dalliiPittosporum dasycaulonPittosporum divaricatumPittosporum eriocarpumPittosporum eriolomaPittosporum eugenioides A. Cunn. – tarata, lemonwood (New Zealand) • Pittosporum fairchildiiPittosporum ferrugineumPittosporum gatopensePittosporum goetzeiPittosporum gomonenensePittosporum heterophyllumPittosporum hosmeri – Kona cheesewood • Pittosporum kirkii – Kirk's pittosporum, Kirk's kōhūhū, thick-leaved kohukohu • Pittosporum koghiensePittosporum lancifoliumPittosporum linearifoliumPittosporum mackeei Tirel & Veillon (Ponérihouen area of New Caledonia) • Pittosporum moluccanumPittosporum multiflorumPittosporum muricatumPittosporum napaliensePittosporum obcordatum – heart-leaved kohuhu • Pittosporum oreillyanum – O'Reilly's pittosporum • Pittosporum ornatumPittosporum orohenensePittosporum paniensePittosporum patulumPittosporum pauciflorumPittosporum pentandrumPittosporum phillyreoides – weeping pittosporum, willow pittosporum, butterbush, native apricot • Pittosporum pickeringiiPittosporum raivavaeensePittosporum ramiflorumPittosporum rapensePittosporum rarotongensePittosporum resiniferum – petroleum nut • Pittosporum revolutum – rough-fruited pittosporum, wild yellow jasmine, yellow pittosporum, Brisbane laurel • Pittosporum rhytidocarpumPittosporum rubiginosumPittosporum senaciaPittosporum silamensePittosporum spinescensPittosporum taitensePittosporum tanianumPittosporum tenuifolium – kōhūhū, kohukohu, black matipo (New Zealand) • Pittosporum terminalioidesPittosporum tobira (Murray) Aiton fil. – Japanese cheesewood, Japanese mock orange (Japan, China, and Korea) • Pittosporum turneriPittosporum umbellatum – haekaro (New Zealand) • Pittosporum undulatum – sweet pittosporum, Australian cheesewood, native daphne, mock orange (east coast of Australia) • Pittosporum virgatumPittosporum viridulumPittosporum viridiflorumPittosporum wingii ==References==
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