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Canarium sumatranum (PROSEA)

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Plant Resources of South-East Asia
Introduction
List of species


Canarium sumatranum Boerl. & Koord.


Protologue: Koord.-Schum., Syst. Verz. 2: 25 (1910).

Vernacular names

  • Indonesia: damar lang (Palembang, Sumatra), benemil (eastern central Sumatra), anglip batu (Simeuluë)
  • Malaysia: kedondong (Peninsular).

Distribution

Peninsular Malaysia and Sumatra.

Uses

The wood is used as kedondong. The resin is used for torches.

Observations

A large tree up to 50 m tall, bole straight, branchless for up to 21 m, up to 120 cm in diameter, bark surface smooth to roughly scaly, greyish-yellow to green, inner bark exuding a resin turning black, bole and branches thorny when young; stipules absent or early caducous, inserted at the base of the petiole, narrow; leaves with 7-11 pairs of leaflets, often lacking a terminal leaflet, leaflets distinctly to gradually acuminate at apex, margin entire, glabrous, with 20-30 pairs of secondary veins which are visible on both surfaces; inflorescence axillary, laxly paniculate; male flowers 8-9 mm long, female ones 6 mm long, stamens 6; fruit ovoid, rounded triangular in cross-section, 15 mm × 10 mm, glabrous. C. sumatranum is found scattered in primary and secondary lowland and hill forest, up to 500 m altitude. The density of the sapwood is 370-650 kg/m3at 15% moisture content.

Selected sources

9, 162, 342, 366, 474, 705.