
Torreya grandis - Wikipedia
Torreya grandis (Chinese: 香榧; pinyin: xiāngfěi; lit. 'fragrant nutmeg yew') is a species of conifer in either the family Taxaceae, or Cephalotaxaceae. Common names include Chinese Torreya and Chinese nutmeg yew , [ 2 ] which refers to its edible seeds that resemble nutmeg and to its yew-like foliage, although it is not related to either ...
Propagating Torreya Taxifolia? - Torreya Guardians
Torreya seeds must never dry out, so how does one store them through the winter? Stratifying torreya seeds outdoors in real soil (protected from rodents) or by "free-planting" seeds individually into their permanent forest plots is always the best approach.
Torreya taxifolia - Wikipedia
Torreya taxifolia, commonly known as Florida torreya or stinking-cedar, but also sometimes as Florida nutmeg or gopher wood, is an endangered subcanopy tree of the yew family, Taxaceae. It is native to only a small glacial refugium in the southeastern United States, at the state border region of northern Florida and southwestern Georgia. [8]
Torreya - Wikipedia
Torreya is a genus of conifers comprising six or seven species placed in the family Taxaceae, though sometimes formerly placed in Cephalotaxaceae. [2][3][4][5] Four species are native to eastern Asia; the other two are native to North America. They are small to medium-sized evergreen trees reaching 5–20 m, rarely 25 m, tall.
Introduction to Chinese Torreya, Efficacy and Indications (Image)
ORIGIN: The seed of Torreya grandis [Taxaceae]. CHEMICAL COMPOSITION: Containing fatty oil, oxalic acid, glucose, polysaccharose, essential oil and tannin. The fatty oil is composed of palmitic acid, stearic acid, oleic acid and glyceride of linoleic acid.
A new species Torreya with the seed-bearing structure from the …
Torreya (Taxaceae) represents a significant taxon within the gymnosperms, and the discovery of Torreya jiuquanensis sp. nov., which exhibits a seed-bearing structure from the Lower Cretaceous in Gansu Province, northwestern China, and provides compelling evidence for the stable traits and evolutionary retardation observed in Taxaceae.
Antioxidant activity and chemical composition of Torreya
In this study, antioxidant activity and chemical constituents of T. grandis cv. Merrillii seed (TGMS) … Torreya grandis cv. Merrillii is an endemic tree species in China, seeds of which are used as a popular snack, possessing beneficial effects on preventing …
Torreya - North Carolina Extension Gardener Plant Toolbox
Torreya is an evergreen shrub or tree in the yew family with 2 being native to North America and 4 being native to Asia. They grow 16 to 65 feet tall and can be either monoecious or dioecious. When monoecious, the pollen and seed cones are on different branches.
Freeplanting seeds of Torreya taxifolia
Torreya has demonstrated in these historic groves its ability to thrive, produce seeds, and establish seedlings naturally in northward latitudes — while remaining noninvasive.
California torreya is a slow-growing, medium-sized tree found along streams and in canyon bottoms and other moist locations (Griffin and Critchfield 1976; Storer and Usinger 1963). In its shrub form, it is found on serpentine soils and in chaparral (Sudworth 1908).
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