Anisoptera thurifera Blume

Species

Angiosperms > Malvales > Dipterocarpaceae > Anisoptera

Characteristics

A large forest tree with a straight trunk and buttresses. The tree can be 50 m tall. The trunk can be 1.2 m across. The crown can be large and irregular. The tree can lose its leaves during the year. The bark is 2 cm thick and the outer bark can be reddish brown with rectangular flakes. The wood has gum canals running along it which secrete a clear, strongly smelling resin. The leaves are carried one after another on opposite sides of the branch. The leaves are oval and 12 cm long by 7 cm wide. The base of the leaf is rounded and the tip is slightly pointed. The leaves are moderately thick and leathery. The leaves are green on both sides but duller underneath, and on 3 cm long leaf stalks. The leaves have a brownish-green appearance. These become hairless at maturity. The flowers occur in clusters and droop and are yellow. The clusters occur in the axils of leaves and at the ends of branches. The fruit are round, 1.5-2 cm across with 2 wings along the sides.
Life form perennial
Growth form tree
Growth support free-standing
Foliage retention evergreen
Sexuality hermaphrodite
Pollination -
Spread -
Mature width (meter) -
Mature height (meter) 47.5
Root system -
Rooting depth (meter) -
Root diameter (meter) -
Flower color -
Blooming months -
Fruit color -
Fruiting months -
Nitrogen fixer -
Photosynthetic pathway c3

Environment

A tropical plant. Common and widely distributed in primary forest at low altitudes in the Philippines. In Papua New Guinea it occurs on ridges in coastal ranges. Often a large number of trees occur together.
More
An emergent or canopy tree in evergreen and semi-evergreen Dipterocarp forests at elevations below 750 metres. It is common and often gregarious, regenerating in secondary forest.
Light -
Soil humidity -
Soil texture -
Soil acidity -
Soil nutriment -
Hardiness (USDA) -

Usage

The seeds are pounded and eaten raw or cooked. The gum is chewed.
Uses food fuel gum invertebrate food material medicinal oil social use tea timber wood
Edible gums nuts seeds
Therapeutic use -
Human toxicity -
Animal toxicity -

Cultivation

Trees are often self sown. They can presumably be grown from seed.
Mode seedlings
Germination duration (days) -
Germination temperacture (C°) -
Germination luminosity -
Germination treatment -
Minimum temperature (C°) -
Optimum temperature (C°) -
Size -
Vigor -
Productivity -

Images

Anisoptera thurifera unspecified picture

Distribution

Anisoptera thurifera world distribution map, present in Philippines

Conservation status

Anisoptera thurifera threat status: Vulnerable

Identifiers

LSID urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:320573-1
WFO ID wfo-0000537375
COL ID 5V2ZY
BDTFX ID -
INPN ID -
Wikipedia (EN) Link
Wikipedia (FR) Link

Synonyms

Mocanera thurifera Shorea mayapis Anisoptera brunnea Anisoptera calophylla Anisoptera lanceolata Anisoptera thurifera Anisoptera tomentosa Anisoptera vidaliana Antherotriche lanceolata Dipterocarpus thurifer Hopea laevis Hopea trinervis

Lower taxons

Anisoptera thurifera subsp. polyandra