Larsenaikia ochreata, commonly known as Wenlock gardenia, scented Gardenia bush or wild Gardenia, is a plant in the coffee family Rubiaceae endemic to Queensland, Australia.
Larsenaikia ochreata is a tree growing to about 15 (or occasionally 20) m tall. Stipules are up to 12 mm long, initially fused into a tube that encloses the leaf budâÂÂthey then split along one side as the bud grows. Leaves are variable in size and shape, but are mostly broadly elliptic and 8âÂÂ25 cm long by 4âÂÂ10 cm wide. They are usually arranged in whorls of three on the twigs but may be in opposite pairs, and they have 8âÂÂ12 lateral veinsâÂÂwhich are quite prominentâÂÂon either side of the midrib.
The inflorescences are and consist of either single flowers, or with 2âÂÂ4 flowers. They are fragrant and are carried on pedicels up to 12 mm long. The green tube is 5âÂÂ8 mm long with narrow linear lobes up to 12 mm long. The white corolla tube may be 55 mm long and 3âÂÂ5 mm diameter, with 5 or 6 lobes (petals) measuring up to 40 mm long and 13 mm wide. The flowers turn yellow as they age.
The fruit is a drupe, yellow/green when mature, to in shape, and up to 50 mm long by 35 mm wide. They are finely hairy on the outside, with the remains of the calyx lobes persisting at the apex. The rind is about 5 mm thick, within which is a cream-coloured placental mass containing numerous seeds about 3âÂÂ6 mm long.
This species was first described as Gardenia ochreata in 1858 by the botanist Ferdinand von Mueller, based on material collected from the Burdekin River. In 1989 the Australian botanist Christopher Francis Puttock transferred it to the genus Kailarsenia, however shortly thereafter the Sri Lankan botanist and Rubiaceae specialist erected a new genus, Larsenaikia, to accommodate this plant.
Two other botanists also described specimens of this plant, giving them names that are now recognised as synonyms of this taxon, i.e. G. macgillivraei (George Bentham, 1867) and G. kershawii (Frederick Manson Bailey, 1914).
The genus name Larsenaikia is an anagram of Kailarsenia, which in turn was created by Tirvengadum to honour the Danish botanist Kai Larsen. The species epithet ochreata is derived from the Latin ', (sheath), referring to the stipules that fully enclose the leaf buds.
Larsenaikia ochreata is widespread in eastern Queensland, and has been observed from the tip of Cape York Peninsula southwards to Central Queensland. It grows in open forest and drier rainforest types such as monsoon forest and vine thickets, at altitudes from sea level to about 400 m.
This species is listed as least concern under the Queensland Government's Nature Conservation Act, and also by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).