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{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/species/quercus-acutissima/?format=api",
"slug": "quercus-acutissima",
"latin_name": "Quercus acutissima",
"description": "Quercus acutissima, the sawtooth oak, is an Asian species of oak native to China, Tibet, Korea, Japan, Indochina (Vietnam, Thailand, Myanmar, Cambodia) and the Himalayas (Nepal, Bhutan, northeastern India). It is widely planted in many lands and has become naturalized in parts of North America.\nQuercus acutissima is closely related to the Turkey oak, classified with it in Quercus sect. Cerris, a section of the genus characterized by shoot buds surrounded by soft bristles, bristle-tipped leaf lobes, and acorns that mature in about 18 months.",
"gbif_id": 2877959,
"image_thumbnail": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/thumbnails/quercus-acutissima_thumbnail_lTsZy42.jpg",
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{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/species/quercus-alba/?format=api",
"slug": "quercus-alba",
"latin_name": "Quercus alba",
"description": "Quercus alba, the white oak, is one of the preeminent hardwoods of eastern and central North America. It is a long-lived oak, native to eastern and central North America and found from Minnesota, Ontario, Quebec, and southern Maine south as far as northern Florida and eastern Texas. Specimens have been documented to be over 450 years old.\nAlthough called a white oak, it is very unusual to find an individual specimen with white bark; the usual colour is a light gray. The name comes from the colour of the finished wood. In the forest it can reach a magnificent height and in the open it develops into a massive broad-topped tree with large branches striking out at wide angles.",
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{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/species/quercus-ilex/?format=api",
"slug": "quercus-ilex",
"latin_name": "Quercus ilex",
"description": "Quercus ilex, the evergreen oak, holly oak or holm oak is a large evergreen oak native to the Mediterranean region. It is a member of the Ilex section of the genus, with acorns that mature in a single summer.",
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{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/species/quercus-robur/?format=api",
"slug": "quercus-robur",
"latin_name": "Quercus robur",
"description": "Quercus robur, the pedunculate oak, is a species of flowering plant in the beech and oak family, Fagaceae. It is a large tree, native to most of Europe and western Asia, and is widely cultivated in other temperate regions. It grows on soils of near neutral acidity in the lowlands and is notable for its value to natural ecosystems, supporting a very wide diversity of herbivorous insects and other pests, predators and pathogens.",
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{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/species/quercus-suber/?format=api",
"slug": "quercus-suber",
"latin_name": "Quercus suber",
"description": "Quercus suber, commonly called the cork oak, is a medium-sized, evergreen oak tree in the section Quercus sect. Cerris. It is the primary source of cork for wine bottle stoppers and other uses, such as cork flooring and as the cores of cricket balls. It is native to southwest Europe and northwest Africa. In the Mediterranean basin the tree is an ancient species with fossil remnants dating back to the Tertiary period. It can survive for as long as two centuries. Typically, once it reaches 25 years old, its thick bark can be harvested for cork every 9 to 12 years without causing harm to the tree.\nIt endures drought and makes little demand on the soil quality and is regarded as a defence against desertification. Cork oak woodlands are home to a multitude of animal and plant species. Since cork is increasingly being displaced by other materials as a bottle cap, these forests are at risk as part of the cultural landscape and as a result animal species such as the Iberian lynx and imperial eagles are threatened with extinction.",
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{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/species/raphia-farinifera/?format=api",
"slug": "raphia-farinifera",
"latin_name": "Raphia farinifera",
"description": "Raphia farinifera is a tropical African palm tree occurring in lowland riparian and swamp forest, also around human habitations and cultivated locations, on stream banks and other moist situations at altitudes of 50–1000 m. Found in Angola, Benin, Burkina, Cameroon, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Ivory Coast, Kenya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Nigeria, Réunion, Senegal, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe, and naturalised in east lowlands of Madagascar. Its generic epithet is derived from raphis = 'needle', probably in reference to the 4 mm long yellowish spines on the margins and main veins of the leaflets. The specific name refers to a type of starchy flour obtained from the trunk pith – farina = 'starch', fera = 'bearing'.\nIt is one of 26 species of the genus Raphia currently recognised, all native to Africa and Madagascar, with one species, R. taedigera found in Central and South America. Their fronds – botanically a single leaf – are among the longest in the plant kingdom, those of R. regalis reaching a length of 25 m.\nThe trunk of this species is up to 10 m tall and about 1 m in diameter – the topmost fronds reach up a further 10 m – and sheathed in persistent leaf bases. Trees occur singly or, because of suckering, in dense clumps. The pendant inflorescences are massive and some 3 m in length, bearing unisexual flowers – male flowers at the distal end, female flowers at proximal – with first order branches of 13–32 rachillae very close-packed in almost one plane (see illustration). Raphia spp. are monocarpic or hapaxanthic, flowering and fruiting only once, followed by death. Raphia farinifera flowers when the tree is some 20–25 years old, and it takes a further 5–6 years from flowering to ripe fruit, all fruits ripening together. The fruit is oblong to ovoid, 5–10 cm in length, with imbricate, glossy, golden-brown scales.",
"gbif_id": 5293210,
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{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/species/raphia-hookeri/?format=api",
"slug": "raphia-hookeri",
"latin_name": "Raphia hookeri",
"description": "Raphia hookeri is a palm species in the family Arecaceae or Palmae. It is found in Western and Central Africa, where it is locally used to make palm wine. It is best noted for its very long leaflets which in the subspecies R. h. gigantea, of Ghana and Ivory Coast, can be 11 ft 6 in (3.5 meters) in length, while only two inches (five centimeters) wide. These are the longest leaflets known from any plant.",
"gbif_id": 5293235,
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{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/species/raphia-sudanica/?format=api",
"slug": "raphia-sudanica",
"latin_name": "Raphia sudanica",
"description": "Raphia sudanica is a palm species in the family Arecaceae. It is found in Western Africa, where it is locally used for construction purposes.",
"gbif_id": 5293265,
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{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/species/rauvolfia-caffra/?format=api",
"slug": "rauvolfia-caffra",
"latin_name": "Rauvolfia caffra",
"description": "Rauvolfia caffra is a tree in the family Apocynaceae. It is commonly known as the quinine tree. These trees are distributed from the Eastern Cape of South Africa to tropical Africa and are found in low-lying forests near rivers and streams, or on floodplains.",
"gbif_id": 3618324,
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},
{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/species/rauvolfia-grandiflora/?format=api",
"slug": "rauvolfia-grandiflora",
"latin_name": "Rauvolfia grandiflora",
"description": "Rauvolfia (sometimes spelled Rauwolfia) is a genus of evergreen trees and shrubs, commonly known as devil peppers, in the family Apocynaceae. The genus is named to honor Leonhard Rauwolf. The genus can mainly be found in tropical regions of Africa, Asia, Latin America, and various oceanic islands.",
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}
]
}