- Stock Photography: HAIRLESS LEAF OF FICUS DRUPACEA by Jivenggo
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- Photo title: Hairless Leaf of Ficus drupacea
- Author: Jivenggo
- Cover photo description:
- Ficus drupacea, also known as the brown-woolly fig or Mysore fig, is a tropical tree native to Southeast Asia and Northeast Australia (it has been introduced into the New World tropics, including Puerto Rico). It is a strangler fig it begins its life cycle as an epiphyte on a larger tree, which it eventually engulfs. Its distinctive features include dense, woolly pubescence, bright yellow to red fleshy fruit, and grayish white bark. It can reach heights of 10–30 meters (33–98 ft). Its fruit are eaten by pigeons, and it is pollinated by Eupristina belgaumensis. It occurs in environments ranging from sea-level beachfront environments to montane forests, up to 1000 m (3281 ft).
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Keywords for Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn timeline photos
tree
plant
leaf
green
flower
jungle
produce
branch
food
shrub
fruit
forest
vegetation
tropics
deciduous
garden
sunlight
evergreen
hairless
ficus
drupacea
brown
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mysore
tropical
native
southeast
asia
northeast
australia
introduced
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including
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begins
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epiphyte
larger
eventually
engulfs
distinctive
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include
dense
woolly
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bright
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red
fleshy
grayish
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reach
heights
10–30
meters
33–98
eaten
pigeons
pollinated
eupristina
belgaumensis
occurs
environments
ranging
sea
level
beachfront
montane
forests
1000
3281
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