Hi,
 Agree with Dr.Phadke. This is Madhuca longifolia var. latifolia.
                       With regards,
                         Neil Soares.

--- On Sat, 2/18/12, raman <[email protected]> wrote:


From: raman <[email protected]>
Subject: [efloraofindia:108574] Trees of Lalbagh - Bangalore - RA - Madhuca 
Longifolia var. longifolia - South Indian Mahua Tree
To: [email protected]
Date: Saturday, February 18, 2012, 7:36 AM


South Indian Mahua is a variety of Mahua which is predominently found in South 
India. It differs from the usual Mahua in that its leaves are narrower. Mohua 
is one of the most important of Indian forest trees, not because it may possess 
valuable timber - and it is hardly ever cut for this purpose - but because of 
its delicious and nutritive flowers. It is a tree of abundant growth and, to 
the people of Central India, it provides their most important article of food 
as the flowers can be stored almost indefinitely. It is large and deciduous 
with a thick, grey bark, vertically cracked and wrinkled. Most of the leaves 
fall from February to April, and during that time the musky-scented flowers 
appear. They hang in close bunches of a dozen or so from the end of the 
gnarled, grey branchlets. The reddish young leaves with the flower clusters 
look very attractive. The flower stalks are green or pink and furry, about 5 
cm. long. The plum-coloured calyx is also
 furry and divides into four or five lobes; within them lies the globular 
corolla, thick, juicy and creamy white. Through small eyelet holes at the top, 
the yellow anthers can be seen. The stamens are very short and adhere to the 
inner surface of the corolla; the pistil is a long, protruding green tongue. It 
is at night that the tree blooms and at dawn each short-lived flower falls to 
the ground. A couple of months after the flowering period the fruit opens. They 
are fleshy, green berries, quite large and containing from one to four shiny, 
brown seeds.

Raman

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