Juniperus
excelsa
(Greek Juniper)
is a juniper found
throughout the eastern Mediterranean,
from northeastern Greece and
southern Bulgaria across Turkey to Syria and
the Lebanon,
and the Caucasus mountains.
A subspecies, J.
excelsa subsp. polycarpos, known as the Persian Juniper,
occurs in the Alborz and
other mountains of Iran east
to northwestern Pakistan,
and an isolated population in the Jebal
Akhdar mountains of Oman;
some botanists treat this as a distinct species Juniperus polycarpos,
syn. J.
macropoda.
It large shrub or tree reaching
6-20 m tall (rarely 25 m), with a trunk up to 2 m diameter and a broadly
conical to rounded or irregular crown. The leaves are
of two forms, juvenile needle-like leaves 8-10 mm long on seedlings, and
adult scale-leaves 0.6-3 mm long on older plants. It is largely dioecious with
separate male and female plants, but some individual plants produce both
sexes. The cones are
berry-like, 6-11 mm in diameter, blue-black with a whitish waxy bloom,
and contain 3-6 seeds;
they are mature in about 18 months. The male cones are 3-4 mm long, and
shed their pollen in early spring.
It often occurs together with Juniperus
foetidissima, being distinguished from it by its slenderer
shoots 0.7-1.3 mm diameter (1.2-2 mm diameter in J. foetidissima),
and grey-green, rather than mid green, leaves. The Algum wood
mentioned in the Bible may
be from this species, but is not definitely so. |