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  2. Terminalia buceras - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terminalia_buceras

    It is known by a variety of names in English, including bullet tree, black olive tree, gregorywood (or gregory wood), Antigua whitewood, and oxhorn bucida. [2] It is native to Mexico, Central America, the Caribbean, and northern South America. [3] It is commonly found in coastal swamps and wet inland forests in low elevations. [4] [5]

  3. Bidni - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bidni

    The fruit is produced in clusters, and the production is sometimes astonishing, the tree becoming literally black with fruit. The tree and its fruit are very resistant to disease, the fruit presents also the advantage that it is never attacked by the olive-fly Dacus Oleae and is therefore always allowed to ripen on the tree. This is a variety ...

  4. Olive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olive

    A pest that spreads through olive trees is the black scale bug, a small black scale insect that resembles a small black spot. They attach themselves firmly to olive trees and reduce the quality of the fruit; their main predators are wasps. The curculio beetle eats the edges of leaves, leaving sawtooth damage. [132]

  5. Dalbergia oliveri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalbergia_oliveri

    The fruit is a green pod containing one to two seeds which turn brown to black when ripe. It is threatened by habitat loss and over-harvesting for its valuable red "rosewood" timber. University of Oxford published the transcriptomes of Dalbergia oliveri and five other Dalbergia spp. [ 5 ] It was found that D. oliveri had more R genes than the ...

  6. What Are Kalamata Olives? Here’s Everything You Need to Know ...

    www.aol.com/kalamata-olives-everything-know...

    BRETT STEVENS/Getty Images. Kalamata olives are a widely recognized and much-loved type of Greek olive that grow on the Kalamon tree and hail from the Peloponnese region in southern Greece.(Note ...

  7. Oleaceae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oleaceae

    Oleaceae, also known as the olive family or sometimes the lilac family, is a taxonomic family of flowering shrubs, trees, and a few lianas in the order Lamiales. [1] It presently comprises 28 genera, one of which is recently extinct. [2] The extant genera include Cartrema, which was resurrected in 2012. [3]

  8. Elaeocarpus holopetalus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elaeocarpus_holopetalus

    Elaeocarpus holopetalus, commonly known as black olive berry, mountain blueberry, or mountain quandong, [2] is species of flowering plant in the family Elaeocarpaceae and is endemic to eastern Australia. It is a shrub or small tree with regularly toothed, lance-shaped to egg-shaped leaves, racemes of white flowers and black, oval fruit.

  9. Olea capensis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olea_capensis

    Olea capensis, the black ironwood, [4] is an African tree species in the olive family Oleaceae. It is widespread in sub-Saharan Africa: from the east in Somalia , Ethiopia and Sudan , south to the tip of South Africa , and west to Cameroon , Sierra Leone and the islands of the Gulf of Guinea , as well as Madagascar and the Comoros . [ 2 ]