Cryptocarya exfoliata

Cryptocarya exfoliata is a species of flowering plant in the family Lauraceae family and is native to Cape York Peninsula the Northern Territory and New Guinea. Its leaves are lance-shaped, the flowers creamy-green and slightly perfumed, and the fruit is a spherical to elliptic black drupe.

Description
Cryptocarya exfoliata is a tree that typically grows to a height of up to 20 m, its stems sometimes buttressed and its young growth softly hairy. Its leaves are lance-shaped, 950–130 mm long and 15–55 mm wide on a petiole 3–11 mm long. The flowers are creamy-green and slightly perfumed, usually arranged in a panicle more or less the same length as the leaves, the perianth tube 1.0–1.4 mm long, 1.3–1.5 mm wide and hairy. The tepals are 1.7–2.1 mm long and 1.2–1.5 mm wide, the outer anthers 0.7–0.9 mm long and 0.5–0.6 mm wide, the inner anthers 0.9–1.0 mm long and 0.4–0.5 mm wide. Flowering occurs from January to March, and the fruit is a black, spherical to elliptic drupe 10–13 mm long and 9–11 mm wide.

Taxonomy
Cryptocarya exfoliata was first formally described in 1942 by Caroline Kathryn Allen in the Journal of the Arnold Arboretum from specimens collected by Leonard John Brass near the Middle Fly River in New Guinea.

Distribution and habitat
This species of Cryptocarya grows in rainforest in New Guinea, Arnhem Land, the Torres Strait Islands and from Cape York Peninsula to Cairns in Queensland, at altitudes from sea level to 450 m.