Dysoxylum acutangulum Miq.

Species

Angiosperms > Sapindales > Meliaceae > Dysoxylum

Characteristics

Tree to 47 m tall; bole to 140 cm diam., fluted and clear to 18 m; buttresses to 3 m tall and 2 m out. Bark smooth, yellowish, with conspicuous lenticels, becoming irregularly cracked and shedding large scales; inner bark yellowish or orangish fawn, somewhat speckled and with groups of conspicuously thickened cells; wood orange-brown, hard. Leafy twigs c. 6 mm diam. with conspicuous cicatrices and lenticels; apical buds stiletto-like with minute fulvous tomentum. Leaves 15–30(–40) cm, 2–6(–7)-jugate, paripinnate with minute apical spike or its scar, glabrous to minutely puberulous, ± decussate; petiole 8–11 cm long, 3–4 mm diam., adaxially grooved and angled when dried, base somewhat swollen; rachis grooved and angled when dried. Largest leaflets the most distal, 9–15 by 5–6.5 cm, elliptic, coriaceous, in life minutely pellucid-punctate (Va eton, I.e.), minutely rugulose when dried, subopposite, bases acute, ± asymmetric, apices acute to acuminate, costae c. 14–16 on each side, rather obscure, spreading, sometimes with domatia in their axils; petiolules 5–8(–10) mm, scarcely swollen. Thyrses 3–8 cm, narrow, axillary to subramiflorous; axes pubescent, bearing fascicles of 1 to a few hyacinth-scented (Valeton, l.c.) flowers; bracts c. 0.5 mm, densely pubescent; pedicels 0–1 mm. Calyx c. 2.5 mm diam., very shallowly crateriform, confluent with pseudopedicel c. 1 mm long, sparsely shortly pubescent without, margin ± 4-lobed. Petals 4, c. 12–13 mm long, oblong, ± puberulous on both sides, yellow or creamy yellow, apices acute. Staminal tube sometimes sparsely pubescent without, glabrous within, margin crenulate; anthers 8(–10), c. 1 mm long, ovate to elliptic, weakly exserted. Disk c. 1.5 mm tall, shallowly cupuliform, fleshy, glabrous or sometimes pubescent within, red. Ovary densely pubescent (3-or) 4-locular, each locule with 2 collateral ovules; style pubescent in proximal half; stylehead subdiscoid. Capsule 5–8 cm diam., subglobose to pyriform, (3-or) 4-valved, glabrous, orange; pericarp to 1 cm thick, heavily veined when old, latex white. Seeds (3) 4, sometimes some aborted, c. 2 cm long, ellipsoid, black with small orange arilloid hilum on one side; cotyledons green.
More
Tree to 47 m. Leaflets 2–4 on each side of midrib, elliptic, without domatia.
Life form perennial
Growth form tree
Growth support -
Foliage retention evergreen
Sexuality dioecy
Pollination -
Spread -
Mature width (meter) -
Mature height (meter) 43.5
Root system -
Rooting depth (meter) -
Root diameter (meter) -
Flower color
Blooming months -
Fruit color -
Fruiting months -
Nitrogen fixer -
Photosynthetic pathway -

Environment

An upper canopy tree in undisturbed lowland and hill forest, growing on hillsides and ridges with sandy soils; at elevations up to 1,000 metres.
Light 7-9
Soil humidity 4-6
Soil texture 3-6
Soil acidity -
Soil nutriment -
Hardiness (USDA) 9-12

Usage

UsesMembalo is perhaps traditionally the most important native meliaceous timber tree and was formerly much exported from Bangka to Java. The wood of the bole and particularly the buttresses is beautifully marked but difficult to work (Burkill, l.c.): it has been largely used for furniture but also beams, cartwheels and coffins. The seeds are said to be poisonous and contain dysoxylum acid.
Uses fuel material medicinal poison social use timber wood
Edible -
Therapeutic use -
Human toxicity -
Animal toxicity -

Cultivation

Can be grown by seedlings.
Mode seedlings
Germination duration (days) -
Germination temperacture (C°) -
Germination luminosity -
Germination treatment -
Minimum temperature (C°) -
Optimum temperature (C°) -
Size -
Vigor -
Productivity -

Distribution

Dysoxylum acutangulum world distribution map, present in Iceland, Philippines, and Thailand

Identifiers

LSID urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:578040-1
WFO ID wfo-0000658461
COL ID 6DR9X
BDTFX ID -
INPN ID -
Wikipedia (EN)
Wikipedia (FR)

Synonyms

Dysoxylum acutangulum Alliaria acutangula

Lower taxons

Dysoxylum acutangulum subsp. foveolatum