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  1. Older sources call it Jacaranda acutifolia, but today it is usually classified as Jacaranda mimosifolia. In scientific use, the name «jacaranda» refers to the genus jacaranda, which has many other members, but in horticultural and everyday use, it almost always refers to the blue jacaranda.

  2. The graphs are built from data from all publications in the database with this species name. In some cases this results in data from more than one variety included in the graph. In other cases the same species may have multiple graphs because of differences in names recorded for the plant.

  3. Synonyms: Common names: Jacaranda (English) Description: Tree to 20 m. Leaves 15-40 × 10-20 cm; pinnae opposite or subopposite with (10-)15-20 pairs; each pinna imparipinnate. Leaflets oblong to elliptic, sessile, opposite, subopposite to alternate, slightly asymmetric, markedly apiculate, 15-25 leaflets each side of the pinna axis, terminal ...

  4. Overview. Jacaranda mimosifolia ' Alba' is the white version of the spectacular semi-deciduous to deciduous Jacaranda tree. It was originally bred in Florida and brought to Australia in 1960 by George Hewitt. It has delicate, bright green, Mimosa like foliage with its large compound leaves made up of narrow leaflets.

  5. Shrub or tree, 5–10 m tall. Leaves twice pinnately compound; rhachis 30–45 cm long, in many pairs, each with 10–28 pairs of mucronate leaflets, 8–18 x 3–6 mm. Calyx c. 2 mm long.

  6. Jun 10, 2005 · Sairus Patel, 29 May 2017. Jacaranda mimosifolia seed cases and seeds. Ronald Bracewell, Trees of Stanford and Environs (2005) This magnificent tree is famous for its 2-inch lavender bells in summer and the carpet of fallen blossoms that forms around it. Before flowering, the foliage, which is extremely finely divided, is also highly attractive.

  7. It is also a common tree in San Diego, California. Jacaranda Mimosifolia Care Size and Growth. Jacaranda mimosifolia is a fast-growing shade tree sprouting to heights of 60′ feet tall, spreading its branches into a crown shape. Its thin bark is silvery-brown in color, smooth when young, but gradually becomes finely scaled as the tree grows older.

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