Juniperus communis

Juniper at Fadden, ACT

Juniperus communis at Fadden, ACT - 14 Jul 2019
Juniperus communis at Fadden, ACT - 14 Jul 2019
Juniperus communis at Fadden, ACT - 14 Jul 2019
Juniperus communis at Fadden, ACT - 14 Jul 2019
Juniperus communis at Fadden, ACT - 14 Jul 2019
Request use of media

Identification history

Juniperus communis 1 Aug 2019 MichaelMulvaney
Juniperus communis 24 Jul 2019 MichaelMulvaney
Unidentified 14 Jul 2019 KumikoCallaway

Identify this sighting


Please Login or Register to identify this sighting.

5 comments

   25 Jul 2019
Pretty sure about the ID - did you notice any dark blue berries?
   25 Jul 2019
No, I did not notice any berries. Is there any season when we likely to see them?
It also looked a young plant. Do they need to grow bigger to have berries?
   2 Aug 2019
Probably need to grow bigger teh berries are pretty persistent
Mike wrote:
   2 Aug 2019
It is dioecious, male and female are separate plants. Berries (on female plant) start green and take 18 months to mature to dark purple with a waxy coating.
   2 Aug 2019
Thank you Michael and Mike. I will check it again in the future and see whether it has berries and their color.

Please Login or Register to comment.

Nearby sightings

Page 1 of 1 - image sightings only

Location information

Sighting information

  • 1 - 3 Abundance
  • 14 Jul 2019 10:29 AM Recorded on
  • KumikoCallaway Recorded by

Species information

  • Juniperus communis Scientific name
  • Juniper Common name
  • Not Sensitive
  • Exotic
  • Medium Weed or Pest
  • Up to 726.93m Recorded at altitude
  • Machine learning
  • In flower
  • External link More information

Record quality

  • Images or audio
  • More than one media file
  • Confirmed by an expert moderator
  • Nearby sighting(s) of same species
  • GPS evidence of location
  • Description
  • Additional attributes
2,152,873 sightings of 19,936 species in 6,475 locations from 11,405 contributors
CCA 3.0 | privacy
We acknowledge the Traditional Owners of this land and acknowledge their continuing connection to their culture. We pay our respects to their Elders past and present.