View allAll Photos Tagged jacarandas

Jacarandas sprouting and blossoming in our Southern Hemisphere springtime. What rises must fall at some point. This year, these purple, lavender beauties are extra pretty. Today the fallen has now been frozen in time.

1- Scientific name = Jacaranda mimosifolia

2- English name = Jacaranda, Blue jacaranda, Black poui, Fern tree

3- Family = Bignoniaceae

4- Arabic name = جكراندة ميموزية الأوراق

Paris April 2020

Taken at the Shoalhaven River, Nowra NSW, about 2 weeks ago.

I have been having a rest from photography, lots of things going on in my life & my interest waned. My cousin came to visit & we went on a few photoshoots together. Just going through & finding a few to post. Nice to be back on.

Johannesburg, South Africa

Paris April 2020

Jacaranda mimosifolia

Sub-tropical tree with long-lasting pale indigo flowers

Jacaranda mimosifolia is a sub-tropical tree native to south-central South America that has been widely planted elsewhere because of its attractive and long-lasting violet-colored flowers. It is also known as the jacaranda, blue jacaranda, black poui, Nupur or fern tree. Older sources call it J. acutifolia, but it is nowadays more usually classified as J. mimosifolia. In scientific usage, the name "jacaranda" refers to the genus Jacaranda, which has many other members, but in horticultural and everyday usage, it nearly always means the blue jacaranda.

 

Quick Facts Conservation status, Scientific classification ...

In its native range in the wild, J. mimosifolia is listed as Vulnerable by the IUCN.[1]

 

Description

The tree grows to a height of up to 20 m (66 ft).[4] Its bark is thin and gray-brown, smooth when the tree is young but eventually becoming finely scaly. The twigs are slender and slightly zigzag; they are a light reddish-brown. The flowers are up to 5 cm (2 in) long, and are grouped in 30 cm (12 in) panicles. They appear in spring and early summer, and last for up to two months. They are followed by woody seed pods, about 5 cm (2 in) in diameter, which contain numerous flat, winged seeds. The blue jacaranda is cultivated for the sake of its large compound leaves, even in areas where it rarely blooms. The leaves are up to 45 cm (18 in) long and bi-pinnately compound, with leaflets little more than 1 cm (0.4 in) long. There is a white form available from nurseries.

 

The unusually shaped, tough pods, which are 5 to 8 cm (2 to 3 in) across, are often gathered, cleaned and used to decorate Christmas trees and dried arrangements.

 

J. mimosifolia fruits

J. mimosifolia fruits

A jacaranda seed pod

A jacaranda seed pod

Early jacaranda sprout

Early jacaranda sprout

Tree in flower in Whakatāne, New Zealand

Tree in flower in Whakatāne, New Zealand

Jacaranda trees in Bhutan

Jacaranda trees in Bhutan

Wood

 

Wood

The wood is pale grey to whitish, straight-grained, relatively soft and knot-free. It dries without difficulty and is often used in its green or wet state for turnery and bowl carving.

 

Habitat and range

Jacaranda mimosifolia is native to southern Brazil, Paraguay, northern Argentina (Salta, Jujuy, Catamarca and Misiones provinces) and southern Bolivia. It is found in the Dry Chaco and flooded savannas, and in the Southern Andean Yungas of the eastern Andean piedmont and inter-Andean valleys, up to 2600 meters elevation. In its native range the tree is threatened by uncontrolled logging and clearing of land for agriculture, and is assessed as Vulnerable in the IUCN Red List.[1]

 

The jacaranda is regarded as an invasive species in parts of South Africa and Queensland, Australia, where it can out-compete native species.[5]

 

Taxonomy

The taxonomic status of the blue jacaranda is unsettled. ITIS regards the older name, J. acutifolia, as a synonym for J. mimosifolia. However, some modern taxonomists maintain the distinction between these two species, regarding them as geographically distinct: J. acutifolia is endemic to Peru, while J. mimosifolia is native to Bolivia and Argentina. If this distinction is made, cultivated forms should be treated as J. mimosifolia, since they are believed to derive from Argentine stock. Other synonyms for the blue jacaranda are J. chelonia and J. ovalifolia. The blue jacaranda belongs to the section Monolobos of the genus Jacaranda.

 

Ornamental use

The blue jacaranda has been cultivated in almost every part of the world where there is no risk of frost; established trees, however, tolerate brief spells of temperatures down to around −7 °C (19 °F).[6] Even when young trees are damaged by a hard frost and suffer dieback, they will often rebound from the roots and grow in a shrub-like, multi-stemmed form.[6] However, flowering and growth will be stunted if the jacaranda is grown directly on the California coast, where a lack of heat combined with cool ocean winds discourages flowering.[6]

 

This plant has won the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.[7]

Photo taken with a phone camera. I turned the phone upside down to get the camera lens close to the water which gives a lake like effect. it is actually a small puddle in the middle of a car park.

Jacaranda Branch laden with flowers

....had set up my camera to take shots of the local Jacaranda festival fireworks and it became quite obvious once they began that I was facing the wrong direction! So now my shots had trees in the way...but hey, it's the Jacaranda festival and those Jacaranda trees in the foreground are laden with purple flowers. In the end I was quite happy with the shot :))

Jacaranda at Sydney Uni, Australia

Jacaranda season in San Diego!

This proved a little tricky trying to get the beautiful colour of the blooms against the deep blue sky. A polariser filter was very effective. The Jacarandas are in full bloom in Brisbane at the moment.

Just one branch of this massive tree. On the ground it was a carpet of purple flowers.

Paris April 2020

Granollers, Catalunya, España

in Sydney, Australia

the blossoms are starting to fall and provide Brisbane with a purple carpet

The annual Jacaranda flowering (Jacaranda mimosifolia) is in full swing in eastern Australia now. The entrance to each Jacaranda flower features a conspicuous staminode. It has a cluster (c. 3mm in diameter) of glandular trichomes which attract bees and other insects. The stamens and stigma lie deeper within the flower (patricksiu.wordpress.com/jacaranda-trees).

 

Macro-Takumar 50mm f4 with extension tube. Lume Cube lighting.

Paris April 2020

Main street with picnic areas, week after Jacaranda festival in this rural town in Queensland, Australia.

Jacaranda Tree on Bloom in UAS, GKVK Campus

Paris April 2020

Chiang Mai, Thailand. 100% natural light.

Impressive Thunder Storm with rain, hail, thunder, lightning, sunshine, steam

I was surprised to see the Jacaranda still flowering here in Victoria. In Queensland it has just about finished flowering for the season

Jacaranda tree at Hamilton Gardens

In afternoon light. Captured as I was about to exit the Botanic Gardens, near Alice Street, Brisbane.

 

Jacaranda is a genus of 49 species of flowering plants in the family Bignoniaceae, native to tropical and subtropical regions of Mexico, Central America, South America, Cuba, Hispaniola, Jamaica, and the Bahamas. It has been planted widely in Asia especially in Nepal. Kind courtesy of Wikipedia

 

In the background, meanwhile ...

 

Situated on the corner of Edward and Alice Street, directly opposite the Botanical Gardens. Originally built in 1888 as a merchant's warehouse, the building has been extensively refurbished to provide a mixed use of retail, commercial and residential. The tenancy on offer provides class and elegant office accommodation with ground floor exposure to accommodate both office and retail users. The location offers great staff amenity with several top restaurants and cafes in the surrounds as well as access to the botanical gardens all the while being only metres from Brisbane's financial precinct.

 

Paris April 2020

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