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A second was concealed in the 120foot spread of the exotic Moreton Bay fig tree that had stood behind the museum for almost a century.
These include Moreton Bay fig trees, and a variety of eucalypts, including spo.
It is very rare to find this in a Moreton Bay Fig Tree.
The flora is a lively mix of local trees including large, shade-giving Moreton Bay figs.
Particularly prominent are the large Moreton Bay Figs.
I heal in the shade of a Moreton Bay fig and listen to the call of the kookaburra.
A tourist attraction in the early 20th century was a giant Moreton Bay Fig, around 60 metres tall.
The huge numbers of fruit produced by the Moreton Bay fig make it a key source of food in the rainforest.
A banyan, similar to the Moreton Bay Fig.
The lighting design imitates the branches of a nearby Moreton Bay Fig tree.
A large Moreton Bay Fig dominates the rainforest horizon.
Walkways lined with elms, oaks and Moreton Bay fig trees provide structure to the otherwise open fields.
Avenues of elms shade pathways along with several large Moreton Bay Fig trees.
It closely resembles its relative the Moreton Bay fig (F. macrophylla).
Wingham Brush is also home to a large number of Moreton Bay Fig trees.
The base of the tree is buttressed, but not as prominently as in the Moreton Bay Fig.
The Moreton Bay Figs, one of the major elements of this planting, continue to dominate the landscape.
The property's centerpiece is an elegant 18-room ranch house atop a hill, surrounded by towering Moreton Bay fig trees and four acres of gardens.
This left the Moreton Bay fig in subsection Malvanthera, section Stilpnophyllum.
Most evident in Wingham Brush are the large Moreton Bay Figs.
Conifers were widely planted from the 1860s along with Moreton Bay Figs and occasionally Oaks.
As soon as they got halfway across the green, Salazar slowed to halt and stood gazing at the Moreton Bay fig.
It is dotted with exotic species such as century-old Moreton Bay Figs from Queensland.
A triangular portion of land originally conceived as a formal garden centred upon a mature Moreton Bay Fig tree.
As is the case with most of the Big Scrub remnants, large Moreton Bay Figs are prominent.
The larvae feed on the leaves of various figs, including Ficus macrophylla.
A permanent photographic research about Ficus macrophylla in Italy.
Ficus macrophylla is commonly cultivated in Hawaii and in northern New Zealand.
Banyan (Ficus macrophylla subsp.
The huge Ficus macrophylla, which is an emblem and a well-known attraction of the modern garden, was imported from Norfolk Island (Australia), in 1845.
Ficus macrophylla is monoecious-both male and female flowers are found on the same plant, and in fact in the same fruit although they mature at different times.
Ficus macrophylla f. columnaris is a fig tree endemic to Lord Howe Island, in the south Pacific Ocean.
It has an obligate mutualism with the Moreton Bay Fig, Ficus macrophylla, the species it pollinates.
Pleistodontes frogatti can only reproduce in the syconia of its host species, the Moreton Bay Fig, Ficus macrophylla.
In Auckland, New Zealand, the palm has itself become a host for the naturalised Australian strangler fig, Ficus macrophylla.
Ficus macrophylla is native to southeast Queensland, eastern New South Wales and Lord Howe Island, and has been planted widely across the world.
The Moreton Bay Fig (Ficus macrophylla) is endemic to the east coast of Australia within a range centred on Moreton Bay.
The Moreton Bay fig (Ficus macrophylla) and Port Jackson Fig (Ficus rubiginosa) are other related species.
Santa Barbara's Moreton Bay Fig Tree located in Santa Barbara, California is believed to be the largest Ficus macrophylla in the country.
Another strangler that begins life as an epiphyte is the Moreton Bay Fig (Ficus macrophylla) of tropical and subtropical eastern Australia, which has powerfully descending aerial roots.
As Ficus macrophylla is a strangler fig, seed germination usually takes place in the canopy of a host tree and the seedling lives as an epiphyte until its roots establish contact with the ground.
Ficus macrophylla is widely used as a feature tree in public parks and gardens in warmer climates such as California, Portugal, Italy (Sicily, Sardinia, Liguria) and Australia.
These areas are characterized by dense groves of very large trees including the iconic Port Jackson Fig (Ficus rubiginosa) and Moreton Bay Fig (Ficus macrophylla) trees.
The trees include a Moreton Bay Fig (Ficus macrophylla) and a number of oaks (Quercus robur) that were planted in 1848 and are the oldest trees in the Marrickville district.