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Sterculia foetida is a soft wooded tree that can grow up to 35 metres (115 feet) tall. [2] Common names for the plant are the bastard poon tree, Java olive tree, hazel sterculia, wild almond tree, and skunk tree. [2] [3] [4]
Wild Almond (also called bastard poon tree, hazel sterculia, Indian almond; in Hindi & Bengali: jangli badam; in Tamil: gorapu-badam, gurapu-vadam, pottaikavalam) [1]-- Sterculia foetida Jacaranda (Blue Jacaranda, Palisander, Nupur नुपुर, Neelmohar नीलमोहर, Green Ebony Tree) -- Jacaranda mimosifolia
Terminalia catappa is a large tropical tree in the leadwood tree family, Combretaceae, native to Asia, Australia, the Pacific, Madagascar and Seychelles. [1] Common names in English include country almond, Indian almond, Malabar almond, sea almond, tropical almond, [3] beach almond [4] and false kamani.
Prunus fasciculata, also known as wild almond, desert almond, or desert peach [2] is a spiny and woody shrub producing wild almonds, which is native to western deserts of North America. Description [ edit ]
Irvingia malayana, also known as wild almond (Vietnamese: Kơ nia, Thai: กระบก, Khmer: ចំបក់) or barking deer’s mango, [3] is a tropical evergreen tree species in the family Irvingiaceae. [4] The specific epithet malayana is from the Latin meaning "of Malaya". [5]
The almond tree prospers in a moderate Mediterranean climate with cool winter weather. [4] It is rarely found wild in its original setting. [6] Almonds were one of the earliest domesticated fruit trees, due to the ability to produce quality offspring entirely from seed, without using suckers and cuttings.
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Wild almond is a common name for several plants and may refer to: Wild growing forms of the almond, Prunus amygdalus, native to the Middle East and South Asia; Brabejum stellatifolium, native to South Africa; Irvingia malayana, native to southeast Asia; Prunus fasciculata, native to the southwestern United States