Hopea depressinerva (PROSEA)
Introduction |
Hopea depressinerva P. Ashton
- Protologue: Gard. Bull. Sing. 22: 275, pl. 20 (1967).
Distribution
Borneo (western Sarawak).
Uses
The timber is used as giam, but is probably only of local value.
Observations
A medium-sized tree of up to 25 m tall, bole with a diameter of up to 50 cm, bark surface slightly cracked, inner bark pale yellowish-brown; young parts glabrescent; leaves lanceolate to narrowly elliptical, 5-13 cm × 2-5 cm, leathery, base cuneate, acumen slender, up to 1.5 cm long, venation scalariform, midrib slightly depressed above, secondary veins 6-8 pairs, ascending at 40-50, slender but raised beneath, depressed above; calyx densely buff sericeous, lobes ovate, acute, the outer 2 somewhat longer and comparatively narrower than the inner 3, stamens 10, equal, forming a ring around the ovary, ovary and stylopodium glabrous, cylindrical, truncate, surmounted by a short style; mature fruits unknown. H. depressinerva is confined to granodiorite hill slopes, where it appears to occur locally gregariously in mixed dipterocarp forest below 500 m altitude.
Selected sources
31, 258, 748.