Flindersia acuminata

Flindersia acuminata, commonly known as silver silkwood, icewood, Putt's pine, Paddy King's beech or silver maple, is a species of tree that has pinnate leaves with between six and ten egg-shaped to elliptic leaflets, creamy yellow flowers arranged in panicles, and fruit studded with short, rough points.

Description
Flindersia acuminata is a tree that typically grows to a height of 33 m and usually has pale brown bark and with its young shoots covered with small star-shaped hairs. Its leaves are pinnate, arranged alternately with between six and ten egg-shaped to elliptical leaflets mostly 50–250 mm long and 13–48 mm wide on petiolules 10–31 mm long. The flowers are arranged in panicles 70–230 mm long. The flowers have five sepals about 2 mm long and five creamy yellow petals about 3 mm long. Flowering occurs from November to January and the fruit is a woody capsule 90–120 mm long studded with short, rough points, and separating into five at maturity, each section containing three winged seeds.

Taxonomy
Flindersia acuminata was first formally described in 1919 by Cyril Tenison White in the Botany Bulletin of the Queensland Department of Agriculture.

Distribution and habitat
Silver silkwood grows in rainforest at altitudes of 200 to 1000 m from near Kuranda to Mission Beach in far north Queensland.

Conservation status
Flindersia acuminata is classified as of "least concern" under the Queensland Government Nature Conservation Act 1992.