Palaquium walsurifolium (PROSEA)
Introduction |
Palaquium walsurifolium Pierre ex Dubard
- Protologue: Bull. Soc. Bot. Fr. 56, Mém. 16: 22 (1909; "walsuraefolium").
Vernacular names
- Indonesia: balam putih, balam serindit (Sumatra), nyatoh jangkar (Kalimantan).
Distribution
Sumatra and Borneo (Sarawak, Sabah, Kalimantan); possibly also in Peninsular Malaysia.
Uses
The timber is used as nyatoh, especially for planks. The latex is sometimes used to adulterate gutta-percha. The fruits are edible. The seeds yield a fat which is used as illuminant.
Observations
- A medium-sized to fairly large tree up to 37 m tall with bole usually up to 50 cm in diameter and having stilt roots.
- Leaves loosely clustered at tip of twigs, obovate, with inconspicuous, transverse tertiary venation, initially pubescent beneath but soon glabrous.
- Flowers in 2-4-flowered clusters, borne on 3-7 mm long pedicels (in fruit up to 20 mm long).
- Fruit globose or ellipsoid, 1-2 cm long, glabrous.
P. walsurifolium usually grows in marshy forest or on peaty soils and is locally common. The timber is yellowish-brown, with a density of 560-840 kg/m3 at 15% moisture content.
Selected sources
100, 190, 318, 461, 743, 779.
Main genus page
Authors
- R.H.M.J. Lemmens (selection of species)