Jagera pseudorhus, commonly named foambark, is a species of rainforest trees, in the northern half of eastern Australia and in New Guinea, constituting part of the flowering plant family Sapindaceae. Named for the saponin foam that forms on the bark after heavy rain.
Jagera pseudorhus var. integerrimaS.T.Reynolds – endemic to the Atherton Tableland, Qld, Australia[3]
Jagera pseudorhus var. pseudorhus – NSW, Qld, Australia and New Guinea[2][4][6]
Description
Growing to 30 m (98 ft) tall and 50 cm (20 in) in trunk diameter. Though smaller in cultivation. The bark is smooth and grey with horizontal raised ridges. The base of larger trees are often flanged.
Leaves are alternate and pinnate with eight to twenty six leaflets. The leaflets 4 to 6 cm long. Toothed, not equal at the base, with a pointed tip. Branchlets and the underside of leaves hairy.
Yellow brown flowers form on panicles in the months of March to May. The fruit forms in August to November. Being a hairy capsule with three cells around 18 mm (0.7 in) long. Capsules mature to a brown colour, after being a violet pink. One seed in each cell, being covered in aril. Care needs to be taken when handling the capsule, as the hairs may cause skin irritation.
The form of this tree makes it well suited as an ornamental. Indigenous Australians use foam from crushed bark or leaves as a fish poison to kill fish enabling easy catching. The foam was also used as a soap.
^ abLeenhouts, Pieter W. (1994). "Jagera pseudorhus var. pseudorhus". In Adema, F.; Leenhouts, P. W.; van Welzen, P. C. (eds.). Flora Malesiana (Digitised, online). Series I, Spermatophyta : Flowering Plants. Vol. 11 pt. 3: Sapindaceae. Leiden, The Netherlands: Rijksherbarium / Hortus Botanicus, Leiden University. p. 617. ISBN90-71236-21-8. Retrieved 8 Dec 2013.