Sindora supa Merr.

Species

Angiosperms > Fabales > Fabaceae > Sindora

Characteristics

Tree 15 m high and 30 cm in diam.; bark black to nearly brown in colour, shed in large scales and exposing pink coloured patches. Stipules lanceolate or subfalcate, 12-14 mm long, much unequally sided, pubescent, glabrescent on the outside, glabrous inside, base hemi-auriculate, caducous. Leaves (2-or) 3-(or 4-)jugate; petiole 1.2-2.5 cm and rachis (1.5-)3-6(-7.2) cm long, both minutely puberulous, glabrescent, or almost glabrous. Leaflets thinly coriaceous, elliptic or obovate-elliptic, elliptic, 2.5-5(-8.5) by 2-3(-4.5) cm; apex obtuse, acute, or shortly acuminate, sometimes slightly emarginate; base obtuse or cuneate, slightly asymmetric; glabrous on both surfaces, except sometimes sparsely hairy on the midrib of lower surface; petiolules very short, up to c. 4 mm, slightly puberulous, glabrescent or glabrous. Inflorescences paniculate, up to 15(-20) cm long, lateral branches up to 5(-10) cm long, both rachis and branches densely tawny pubescent; bracts lanceolate, (4-)6-8 mm, bracteoles resembling bracts but about half the size, both with some distinctly spiny outgrowths (up to c. 4 mm long), densely appressed puberulous on both surfaces; pedicels c. 1.5(-4) mm, densely puberulous. Calyx lobes elliptic, oblong, or lanceolate, (6.5-)10-12 mm long, bearing up to c. 10 (-23) slender, easily detached, puberulous, spiny outgrowths on the outer surface, densely puberulous outside, appressed shortly hairy inside. Petal narrowly elliptic or lanceolate, 10-12 mm long, densely puberulous outside and villose on the margins, glabrous inside. Stamens: united basal parts of filaments c. 3 mm high; free filaments and staminodes up to e. 18 mm, puberulous on the lower 1/2-1/3; perfect anthers 2 (biggest), ellipsoid, c. 3.5 mm long, the others (much) smaller. Ovary stiped (c. 3 mm), rhomboid, c. 3 by 2 mm, woolly mingled with many dot-like outgrowths (dissecting microscope or hand-lens!); style up to c. 23 mm, slightly hairy on about the lower 10 mm, otherwise glabrous; stigma capitate. Pods (young) broadly ellipsoid, 4-5 by 3-3.5 cm, flattened, bearing many more or less evenly placed, straight, sharp spines (c. 5 mm long), fugaciously pubescent on and among the spines, 2-seeded (impressions on the inner surface of the valves). Seeds (not seen, observed from the impressions) broadly elliptic, c. 3 by 2 cm (fide Merrill, l.c. 1906: seeds 2 to 4, ovate, hard, black, with an arillate funicle).
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Tree to 15 m tall. Stem puberulous, glabrescent. Leaves: stipules leafy, 1 cm long, acute; petiole 16-25 mm long, with prominent, wrinkled base; rachis 6-7 cm long; leaflets 3 pairs, opposite, elliptic, 4-7.5 cm long, 2.7-4 cm wide, rounded to shallowly retuse, penninerved and reticulate between, coriaceous, glabrous except puberulous abaxial midrib. Panicle axillary or terminal, 10-15 cm long; rachis pubescent; bracts 4 mm long; pedicels 2 mm long, 2-bracteate. Receptacle of calyx short; lobes 4, thick, 1 cm long, tomentose outside with yellowish hairs and a few, short, pubescent prickles in upper half, densely hirsute inside. Petal as long as calyx, appressed-tomentose on lower margins. Stamens: two 2 cm long with anthers c. 3 mm long; remainder c. 1 cm long and probably not fertile; filaments hairy at base, glabrous above. Pistil c. 22 mm long; ovary and base of style densely hirsute; stigma slightly enlarged. Pod broadly ovate, woody, 4-5 cm long, covered with robust prickles to 5 mm long, rusty-pubescent, glabrescent. Seeds 4, ovate, black.
Life form perennial
Growth form tree
Growth support -
Foliage retention deciduous
Sexuality hermaphrodite
Pollination -
Spread -
Mature width (meter) -
Mature height (meter) 15.0
Root system -
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Nitrogen fixer -
Photosynthetic pathway c3

Environment

Forests at low and medium altitudes; occurring on limestone ridges.
Light -
Soil humidity -
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Hardiness (USDA) 8-12

Usage

UsesAn important timber tree. Its wood is used for naval and general constructions and is often substituted for the more valuable Ipil wood [Intsia bijuga (Colebr.) Kuntze]. A light yellow or straw-coloured oil is secured from the wood of the living tree. It is used in the manufacture of paint, especially for use on ships, varnish for sailing boats and as an illuminant. See Brown Minor Prod. Philipp., Bot. 2 1921 38 cum tab. Burkill Diet. Econ. Prod. Malay Penins. 1935 2032.
Uses food material medicinal oil timber wood
Edible -
Therapeutic use Skin (unspecified)
Human toxicity -
Animal toxicity -

Cultivation

Can be grown by seedlings.
Mode seedlings
Germination duration (days) -
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Germination luminosity -
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Productivity -

Distribution

Sindora supa world distribution map, present in Australia, Indonesia, India, Malaysia, Philippines, and Singapore

Conservation status

Sindora supa threat status: Vulnerable

Identifiers

LSID urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:518611-1
WFO ID wfo-0000187916
COL ID 4XJMG
BDTFX ID -
INPN ID -
Wikipedia (EN) Link
Wikipedia (FR)

Synonyms

Sindora supa