Hong Kong Camellia

Hong Kong Camellia
Camellia hongkongensis
Conservation status
See text
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Eudicots
(unranked): Asterids
Order: Ericales
Family: Theaceae
Genus: Camellia
Species: C. hongkongensis
Binomial name
Camellia hongkongensis
Seemann

Camellia hongkongensis (Chinese: 香港茶, the Hong Kong Camellia, is a species of Camellia.

Description

Camellia hongkongensis is a small evergreen tree which can grow to 10 m-30 feet tall. Of the Camellia species native to Hong Kong, only this species bears red flowers.

Its young branches are reddish brown. The leaves are leathery and oblong with 7-13 cm long. The young branches and leaf are glabrous.[1]

Distribution

In Hong Kong, three individuals of the species were first discovered in a ravine in Victoria Peak by Colonel Eyre in 1849; it is later found in Pok Fu Lam, Mount Nicholson, Mount Parker on Hong Kong Island. It is also found in Guangdong.[1]

Specimens of the Hong Kong Camellia are living in the Shing Mun Arboretum public gardens.[1] In Hong Kong, it is a protected species under Forestry Regulations Cap. 96A.

Camellia hongkongensis was introduced to Japan in 1958 from Hong Kong Zoological and Botanical Gardens.

References

  1. ^ a b c Hong Kong Herbarium: Camellia hongkongensis