Flowers Were Scarce, As Is Usual In Equatorial Forests, And It
Was Only At Rare Intervals That I Met With Anything Striking.
A
few fine climbers were sometimes seen, especially a handsome
crimson and yellow Aeschynanthus, and a fine leguminous plant
with clusters of large Cassia-like flowers of a rich purple
colour.
Once I found a number of small Anonaceous trees of the
genus Polyalthea, producing a most striking effect in the gloomy
forest shades. They were about thirty feet high, and their
slender trunks were covered with large star-like crimson flowers,
which clustered over them like garlands, and resembled some
artificial decoration more than a natural product.
The forests abound with gigantic trees with cylindrical,
buttressed, or furrowed stems, while occasionally the traveller
comes upon a wonderful fig-tree, whose trunk is itself a forest
of stems and aerial roots. Still more rarely are found trees
which appear to have begun growing in mid-air, and from the same
point send out wide-spreading branches above and a complicated
pyramid of roots descending for seventy or eighty feet to the
ground below, and so spreading on every side, that one can stand
in the very centre with the trunk of the tree immediately
overhead. Trees of this character are found all over the
Archipelago, and the accompanying illustration (taken from one
which I often visited in the Aru Islands) will convey some idea
of their general character. I believe that they originate as
parasites, from seeds carried by birds and dropped in the fork of
some lofty tree.
Enter page number
PreviousNext
Page 121 of 419
Words from 32561 to 32821
of 114260