Site icon THE FIGS OF BORNEO

Ficus limosa: Introduction

MUD FIG Ficus limosa C. C. Berg (2004)  SECTION SYCOCARPUS

Latin: limosa translates as muddy or dirty or slimy. Berg (2004) notes that on all the specimens he has seen in herbariums there are traces of silt or river mud.

Habit: Small rheopytic tree growing on muddy river banks along lowland rivers  in western Sarawak only.

Leaf: Hairy, oblong leaves  with 6-10 pairs of side veins,  2 -6 cm wide x 5-16 cm long.

Fig: The green figs which grow in clusters from the trunk ripen green/grey. The figs are covered in raised lenticels ( small protuberances ) giving the surface a very rough appearance.

Distinguish: Berg notes that this fig is obviously related to F. obpyramidata  an introduced  cultivated species occasionally grown in home orchards in Sarawak.

See Ficus obpyramidata.

Distribution: A very rare Borneo endemic confined to the banks of muddy lowland rivers in western Sarawak. The TYPE was collected by Peter Ashton at Nanga Sepulau, Segan, Sarawak. S22036.

Ashton (2019) A Botanist in Borneo

More recently photographed by Astrid Cruaud and Jean-Yves Rasplus at Sungai Paku in SW Sarawak.

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