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Camellia sinensis

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Camellia sinensis

Camellia sinensis is a species of evergreen shrub or small tree in the flowering plant family Theaceae. Its leaves, leaf buds, and stems are used to produce tea. Common names include tea plant, tea shrub, and tea tree (unrelated to Melaleuca alternifolia, the source of tea tree oil, or the genus Leptospermum commonly called tea tree).

White tea, yellow tea, green tea, oolong, dark tea (which includes pu-erh tea) and black tea are all made from two of the five varieties which form the main crops now grown, C. sinensis var. sinensis and C. s. var. assamica, but are processed differently to attain varying levels of oxidation with black tea being the most oxidized and white being the least. Kukicha (twig tea) is also made from C. sinensis, but uses twigs and stems rather than leaves.

The name sinensis is a compound meaning "from China" in Botanical Latin. The two parts are sin from Latin meaning China and ensis the suffix meaning place of origin.

The generic name Camellia is taken from the Latinized name of Rev. Georg Kamel, SJ (1661–1706), a Moravian-born Jesuit lay brother, pharmacist, and missionary to the Philippines.

Camellia sinensis is widely known by the common name tea tree, a name in use since 1760. However, it is also used to refer to shrubs or trees of the myrtle family from Australia and New Zealand, most frequently species in Leptospermum or Melaleuca the first usage dating to 1790. Tea trees are also variously called tea-bushes, tea-shrubs, and tea-plants.

Camellia sinensis is a woody shrub or tree that is typically 1 to 5 m (3.3 to 16.4 ft) tall, but can be as tall as 20 m (66 ft). It is usually trimmed to a height of about 1 m (3.3 ft) with a flat top when in commercial tea plantations. The bark on trunks is smooth and gray with a yellow or brown tone. Young branches are yellow with a gray cast to them while new twigs are red-purple with white hairs. In older trees the trunk reaches as much as 40 cm in diameter.

In seedlings the taproot is dominant, but in mature plants the distribution of roots depends upon individual plant characteristics and growing conditions. In areas with shallow soils or high water tables tea bushes will have a shallow, fibrous root system while in areas with deep soils root have been found at depths of 5.5 m. Tea bushes reach peak productivity at ages of 30 to 50 years, but can remain productive for over a century.

The leaves are an attractive green and tend to be smaller on cultivated plants than wild ones, ranging in size from 4 to 22 cm (1.5 to 8.5 in) and a width of 2 to 7.7 cm (0.8 to 3.0 in). Their shape is elliptic, oblong-elliptic, or oblong, and they have a leathery texture. The upper surface is shining dark green and hairless while the underside is pale green and can be hairless or pubescent, covered in plant hairs. The center vein is raised above the surface of the leaf on both sides as are the smaller seven to nine veins to each side. The netlike veins between are also visible. The leaf tip has a wide angle and the edges are serrate to serrulate, having asymmetrical teeth that point forwards to very fine serrations.

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