I am sure this is a species of Brachychiton in the Sterculiaceae. B. populneus from Australia is the most frequently cultivated in the Mediterranean area. You will need to look in a Mediterranean cultivated plant or subtropical tree book for this one. You can now check further on the web, but many on Google images seem to be wrongly identified!
Brachychiton populneus. This ornamental is planted as a street tree in Israel, mainly in the coastal plain. An alien that does not invade in our region.
Could someone help me identify this please? I know its nickname in Chinese as "the blood of the Jesus Christ", and also know it probably grows in Madagascar.
Brachychiton populneus (Schott & Endl.) R. Br. by recent classification belong to the family Malvaceae, order Malvales. I have included the botanical authorities for this plant. Please, check this out.
It is a Brachychiton populneus (Schott & Endl.) R. Br., also referred to as Bottle Tree or Kurrajong in its native Australia. It is a very popular ornamental tree here in California due to its high drought tolerance. It is quite beautiful with clusters of small, white bell-shaped flowers and very distinctive boat-shaped seed pods. The USDA has it in the order Malvales and the Sterculiaceae family.
Hi, it is a Brachychiton populneus (Schott & Endl.) R. Br. (basionym: Poecilodermis populnea Schott & Endl. Meletemata Botanica 1832), Sterculiaceae Family. It is a native plant of Australia and in Italy we use it as ornamental tree.
Of course it's B. populneus, shown in the picture seeds I've brought a few years ago to Poland and, planted in a pot. At the moment it is a pretty big tree.I am just lokk at them.
Of course, it is Brchychiton populneus, cultivated as ornamental tree in many provinces of the Mediterranean coasts of Spain. It is a common species in Valencia, for instance.
Undoubtedly the plant is Brachychiton populneus (Schott & Endl.) R. Br. of family Malvaceae . It is planted as ornamental tree for its beautiful foliage in several parts of the world. Probably this plant is native of Australia.
Ammar, if you are interested in a much showier but more tender member of the genus definitely consider B. acerifolius. Happy to provide other suggestions.