raman
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For completeness sake let me add these trees also.
It is a matter of astonishment to many that the delicious mango, one of
the most celebrated of Indian fruits, is a member of the family
Anacardiaceae notorious for embracing a number of highly poisonous
plants. The mango tree is erect, 30 to 100 ft high, with a broad,
rounded canopy which may, with age, attain 100 to 125 ft in width, or a
more upright, oval, relatively slender crown. In deep soil, the taproot
descends to a depth of 20 ft, the profuse, wide-spreading, feeder root
system also sends down many anchor roots which penetrate for several
feet. The tree is long-lived, some specimens being known to be 300 years
old and still fruiting. Nearly evergreen, alternate leaves are borne
mainly in rosettes at the tips of the branches and numerous twigs from
which they droop like ribbons on slender petioles 1 to 4 in long.
Hundreds and even as many as 3,000 to 4,000 small, yellowish or reddish
flowers, 25% to 98% male, the rest hermaphroditic, are borne in profuse,
showy, erect, pyramidal, branched clusters 2 1/2 to 15 1/2 in high.
There is great variation in the form, size, color and quality of the
fruits. They may be nearly round, oval, ovoid-oblong, or somewhat
kidney-shaped, often with a break at the apex, and are usually more or
less lop-sided.
Raman
Mango Tree - Tender Leaf.jpg