Hopea cagayanensis (PROSEA)

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Plant Resources of South-East Asia
Introduction
List of species


Hopea cagayanensis (Foxw.) v. Slooten


Protologue: Reinwardtia 3: 318 (1956).

Synonyms

Balanocarpus cagayanensis Foxw. (1918).

Vernacular names

  • Philippines: narek (Ibanag), narig (Negrito, Ibanag), narik (Ibanag, Iloko).

Distribution

The Philippines (north-eastern Luzon).

Uses

The timber is used as giam, especially for poles and piles and house construction.

Observations

A medium-sized tree, bole generally branchless for 8-15 m and with a diameter of 25-50(-70) cm, without prominent buttresses; young parts and domatia densely persistently tawny pubescent; leaves lanceolate, 8-10 cm × 2.5-4 cm, thin leathery, base unequal, acumen slender, up to 1.5 cm long, venation scalariform, midrib distinctly elevated above, secondary veins 9-12 pairs, arched at 55-65, slender but prominent beneath; stamens 15, shorter than the style, in 3 more or less unequal verticils, ovary small, ovoid, tapering into an equally long somewhat narrower stylopodium, style short, columnar; fruit sepals short, subequal, 2 outer up to 9 mm × 7 mm, incrassate, 3 inner up to 10 mm × 10 mm, obtuse. H. cagayanensis occurs locally abundantly in semi-evergreen forest at low altitude. The density of the wood is about 920 kg/m3at 15% moisture content.

Selected sources

175, 258, 579, 599, 748.