Species

Ficus carica

Etymology

Ficus: The Latin name for fig tree, possibly derived from the Hebrew word fag

Common Name(s)

Fig

Family

Moraceae

Flora Category

Vascular - Exotic

Structural Class

Dicotyledonous Trees & Shrubs

Habitat

Terrestrial. waste places, scrubland.

Features

Deciduous, dioecious shrub or small tree up to 10 m high. Young stems +/- glabrous to moderately hairy, becoming glabrous. Leaves sparsely to moderately hairy above, often densely hipsid below, usually deeply palmately 3-7 lobed and irregularly serrate or crenate, broadly ovate, obtuse to cordate and symmetric at base, c. 10-25 cm long; veins usually not prominently raised; petiole < blade; stipules 2 per node, glabrous, oblong, caducous. Inflorescence sparsely hairy, pyriform, green, shortly pedunculate. Syncarp green to purplish, 5-8 cm long; achenes irregularly ovoid to subglobose, c. 2mm long. (Webb et al 1988).

Flowering

December, January, February

Year Naturalised

1870

Origin

S. Europe, W. Asia

Reason For Introduction
Ornamental

Life Cycle Comments
Perennial.

Reproduction
Spreads vegetatively, doesn't set seed.

Dispersal
F. carica is cultivated for its edible fruits, spread is largely by humans.

This page last updated on 18 Jan 2010