About Pseudoweinmannia lachnocarpa (F.Muell.) Engl.
Pseudoweinmannia lachnocarpa (F.Muell.) Engl. is a small to large tree that reaches up to 40 metres in height, with an exceptionally wide buttress that can grow to 2.5 metres across; its base is often distinctly and broadly buttressed. The thin bark is grey or fawn in colour, rough to the touch, and marked with small pustules and scales. Small branches are smooth, ranging from greyish white to brown; they are green at the tips and bear white oval-shaped lenticels. Leaves are arranged in groups of three, growing opposite one another on the stem. Leaflets are 3 to 15 cm long and 1 to 5 cm wide, elliptic in shape, toothed, glossy green, and almost lack leaf stalks. Leaf veins are raised and clearly visible on both leaf surfaces. This species grows in undisturbed primary rainforest, on fertile alluvial and volcanic soils in high-rainfall areas. It occurs in riverine, littoral, tropical, and subtropical rainforest, ranging from the Richmond River in New South Wales north to Cooktown in tropical Queensland.