Weirdest Tree Ever? Jabuticaba Grows Fruit Right on its Trunk

The world is full of bizarre wonders, from flowers that look utterly alien to otherworldly landscapes and terrifying deep-sea creatures that seem to have sprung straight from your nightmares. This particular tree might not look quite as monstrous as six-foot-tall blooms or carnivorous plants that are large enough to consume rats, but it’s certainly strange: it grows its fruit directly on its trunk.

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Jabuticaba is native to the Minas Gerais and São Paulo states of southeastern Brazil, and starts off looking ordinary enough, save for the salmon-covered leaves it sprouts while it’s still young. As it matures to fruiting age, the first sign of something unusual are the starry white blooms that appear not on its branches, as you’d expect, but on its trunk.

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When uncultivated, it flowers and fruits once or twice a year, but when regularly irrigated it can produce its grape-like, thick-skinned berries year-round. In Brazil, where it can be eaten immediately, it’s typically served fresh. Since it starts to ferment within three days of ripening, it has to be preserved into jam, tarts, wine or liqueur to give it a longer shelf life.

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Attempts to grow it commercially in North America haven’t been successful, since the climactic conditions aren’t quite right and the trees tend to grow very slowly, making it a treat you should really travel to South America to enjoy properly.

Images via: Adriano Makoto Suzuki/Flickr Creative Commons, mauroguanadi/Flickr Creative Commons 1 + 2, Roberto Antonio Hoffman/Flickr Creative Commons, Bruno.karklis/wikimedia commons