Difference between revisions of "Canarium indicum (PROSEA)"

From PlantUse English
Jump to: navigation, search
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 3: Line 3:
 
<big>''[[Canarium indicum]]'' L.</big>
 
<big>''[[Canarium indicum]]'' L.</big>
 
__NOTOC__
 
__NOTOC__
 +
:Protologue: Amoen. Acad. 4: 143 (1759).
  
 
:Family: Burseraceae
 
:Family: Burseraceae
Line 8: Line 9:
 
== Synonyms ==
 
== Synonyms ==
  
*''Canarium amboinense'' Hochr.,
+
*''Canarium mehenbethene'' Gaertner (1791),
 +
*''Canarium zephyrinum'' Duchesne (1836),
 +
*''Canarium moluccanum'' Blume (1850),
 +
*''Canarium amboinense'' Hochr. (1904).
 
*''C. commune'' L.,
 
*''C. commune'' L.,
*''C. moluccanum'' Blume,
 
*''C. zephyrinum'' Rumphius.
 
  
 
== Vernacular names ==
 
== Vernacular names ==
  
*Indonesia: kenari ambon (Sundanese), jal (Ambon), kanari bagéa (Moluccas)
+
*Indonesia: kenari ambon (Sundanese), kanari ternate (northern Sulawesi), kanari bagea (Moluccas), jal (Ambon)
*Papua New Guinea: galip (Pidgin), lawele (New Britain), hinuei (New Ireland).
+
*Papua New Guinea: red canarium (general), galip (Pidgin), lawele (New Britain), hinuei (New Ireland).
  
 
== Distribution ==
 
== Distribution ==
  
Indonesia (Sulawesi, Moluccas, Irian Jaya), Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands and surrounding islands. It is often cultivated, especially in Melanesia.
+
Indonesia (Sulawesi, Moluccas, Irian Jaya), Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands and surrounding islands. It is often cultivated, especially in Melanesia and sometimes elsewhere.
  
 
== Uses ==
 
== Uses ==
  
In Melanesia the seeds are highly esteemed as a food. Oil from the seeds is used as a substitute for coconut oil. The wood is soft and mainly used as firewood.
+
In Melanesia the seeds are highly esteemed as a food. Oil from the seeds is used as a substitute for coconut oil. The wood is used as kedondong, especially for light construction, mouldings, interior finish, and as a firewood.  
  
 
== Observations ==
 
== Observations ==
  
*Tree, up to 40 m tall and trunk 1 m in diameter, with buttresses.
+
*A medium-sized to fairly large tree up to 40 m tall, bole usually short, branchless for up to 10(-26) m, up to 100 cm in diameter, with buttresses up to 1 m high, bark surface smooth to scaly and dippled, grey or brownish-grey to yellow-brown, inner bark laminated, reddish-brown to pinkish-brown, exuding a milky resin; stipules persistent, rarely inserted on the petiole, ovate to oblong, large and prominently dentate.
*Leaves 3-7-jugate. Infructescences large with up to 30 fruits.
+
*Leaves with 7-15 leaflets, leaflets with apex gradually to distinctly acuminate, margin entire, glabrous, with (8-)10-15(-20) pairs of secondary veins which are slightly sunken above and prominent below.
*Fruit an ovoid drupe, 3-6 cm × 2-3 cm, round to slightly triangular in cross-section.
+
*Inflorescence terminal, broadly paniculate; male flowers c. 10 mm long, female ones up to 15 mm long, stamens 6.
 +
*Infructescences large with up to 30 fruits.
 +
*Fruit an ovoid drupe, 3-6 cm × 2-3 cm, circular to slightly triangular in cross-section, glabrous.
 
*Seed usually 1.
 
*Seed usually 1.
  
In low altitude rain forests, but cultivated up to 600 m. Flowering mainly from October to December, fruiting from July to December. Var. ''platycerioideum'' Leenh. (occurring in Irian Jaya), differs in having larger leaves and larger fruits.
+
Two varieties have been distinguished. Var. ''platycerioideum'' Leenh. differs from var. ''indicum'' in having larger leaflets and larger fruits and is rare in Irian Jaya. ''C. indicum'' occurs naturally in primary and secondary rain forest, up to 500(-1850) m altitude, and cultivated up to 600 m. Flowering mainly from October to December, fruiting from July to December. The density of the wood is 500-650 kg/m<sup>3</sup> at 12% moisture content. See also the table on wood properties.
  
 
== Selected sources ==
 
== Selected sources ==
  
 
*van Steenis, C.G.G.J. et al. (Editors), 1950-. Flora Malesiana. Series 1. Vol. 1, 4-10. Centre for Research and Development in Biology, Bogor, Indonesia, and Rijksherbarium, Leiden, the Netherlands. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, Boston, London.
 
*van Steenis, C.G.G.J. et al. (Editors), 1950-. Flora Malesiana. Series 1. Vol. 1, 4-10. Centre for Research and Development in Biology, Bogor, Indonesia, and Rijksherbarium, Leiden, the Netherlands. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, Boston, London.
 +
 +
60, 145, 154, 162, 330, 342, 366, 673. timbers
  
 
== Authors ==
 
== Authors ==
Line 43: Line 49:
 
P.C.M. Jansen, J. Jukema, L.P.A. Oyen, T.G. van Lingen
 
P.C.M. Jansen, J. Jukema, L.P.A. Oyen, T.G. van Lingen
  
 +
== Main genus page ==
  
 +
*[[Canarium (PROSEA Timbers)|''Canarium'']]
 +
*See also [[Canarium (PROSEA Exudates)|''Canarium'' (Exudates)]]
  
 +
[[Category:Exudates (PROSEA)]]
 +
[[Category:Timbers (PROSEA)]]
 
[[Category:Fruits and nuts (PROSEA)]]
 
[[Category:Fruits and nuts (PROSEA)]]
 
[[Category:PROSEA]]
 
[[Category:PROSEA]]

Latest revision as of 15:51, 7 August 2018

Logo PROSEA.png
Plant Resources of South-East Asia
Introduction
List of species


Canarium indicum L.

Protologue: Amoen. Acad. 4: 143 (1759).
Family: Burseraceae

Synonyms

  • Canarium mehenbethene Gaertner (1791),
  • Canarium zephyrinum Duchesne (1836),
  • Canarium moluccanum Blume (1850),
  • Canarium amboinense Hochr. (1904).
  • C. commune L.,

Vernacular names

  • Indonesia: kenari ambon (Sundanese), kanari ternate (northern Sulawesi), kanari bagea (Moluccas), jal (Ambon)
  • Papua New Guinea: red canarium (general), galip (Pidgin), lawele (New Britain), hinuei (New Ireland).

Distribution

Indonesia (Sulawesi, Moluccas, Irian Jaya), Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands and surrounding islands. It is often cultivated, especially in Melanesia and sometimes elsewhere.

Uses

In Melanesia the seeds are highly esteemed as a food. Oil from the seeds is used as a substitute for coconut oil. The wood is used as kedondong, especially for light construction, mouldings, interior finish, and as a firewood.

Observations

  • A medium-sized to fairly large tree up to 40 m tall, bole usually short, branchless for up to 10(-26) m, up to 100 cm in diameter, with buttresses up to 1 m high, bark surface smooth to scaly and dippled, grey or brownish-grey to yellow-brown, inner bark laminated, reddish-brown to pinkish-brown, exuding a milky resin; stipules persistent, rarely inserted on the petiole, ovate to oblong, large and prominently dentate.
  • Leaves with 7-15 leaflets, leaflets with apex gradually to distinctly acuminate, margin entire, glabrous, with (8-)10-15(-20) pairs of secondary veins which are slightly sunken above and prominent below.
  • Inflorescence terminal, broadly paniculate; male flowers c. 10 mm long, female ones up to 15 mm long, stamens 6.
  • Infructescences large with up to 30 fruits.
  • Fruit an ovoid drupe, 3-6 cm × 2-3 cm, circular to slightly triangular in cross-section, glabrous.
  • Seed usually 1.

Two varieties have been distinguished. Var. platycerioideum Leenh. differs from var. indicum in having larger leaflets and larger fruits and is rare in Irian Jaya. C. indicum occurs naturally in primary and secondary rain forest, up to 500(-1850) m altitude, and cultivated up to 600 m. Flowering mainly from October to December, fruiting from July to December. The density of the wood is 500-650 kg/m3 at 12% moisture content. See also the table on wood properties.

Selected sources

  • van Steenis, C.G.G.J. et al. (Editors), 1950-. Flora Malesiana. Series 1. Vol. 1, 4-10. Centre for Research and Development in Biology, Bogor, Indonesia, and Rijksherbarium, Leiden, the Netherlands. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, Boston, London.

60, 145, 154, 162, 330, 342, 366, 673. timbers

Authors

P.C.M. Jansen, J. Jukema, L.P.A. Oyen, T.G. van Lingen

Main genus page