Malachite, Hedysarum and Fatsia japonica belong to Acanthopanax family, but they belong to different families, which are malachite, Hedysarum and Fatsia japonica. Here is the difference between Fatsia japonica, Schefflera and peacock wood.
Peacock wood

Duck foot wood, that is, goose foot wood. It has palmately compound leaves, which are generally composed of 5-7 leaflets. The leaves are dark green, with very smooth and smooth leaf surface. The shape of the leaves is long oval, and there are leaflets on the top of the long petiole, which looks very similar to the duck web, so it has the name of this image.

Fatsia japonica, known as palm tree in foreign countries, is a kind of erect shrub. If it is cultivated indoors, it can be up to 1 m high, with few branches and palmlike leaves, about 5-9 split, just like an open green palm. The biggest difference between it and Malachite wood and Schefflera is that it does not have compound leaves, but leaves split. At first, the tender leaves are brown, and then they will become glossy dark green.

Fatsia japonica can be used as a medium-sized indoor potted plant. The flower leaf Fatsia japonica is a variety of it. There are yellow and white spots on the leaves. Another kind of BearPaw wood is a hybrid of Fatsia japonica and ivy. Its leaves are smaller and its color is lighter.