Palaquium semaram (PROSEA)
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Introduction |
Palaquium semaram H.J. Lam
- Protologue: Bull. Jard. Bot. Buitenzorg, sér. 3, 7: 43 (1925).
Synonyms
- Croixia semaram (H.J. Lam) Baehni (1965).
Vernacular names
- Indonesia: balam hitam, balam seminai (Sumatra), lakis bukit daun lebar (Lingga)
- Malaysia: nyatoh semaram, semaram (Peninsular).
Distribution
Peninsular Malaysia, Sumatra and Lingga.
Uses
The timber is used as nyatoh. The seeds yield a fat which may be used for cooking.
Observations
- A large tree up to 50 m tall, with columnar bole, often free of branches for over 25 m, up to 90 cm in diameter and with large plank buttresses.
- Leaves densely clustered at tip of twigs, spatulate or obovate, with reticulate tertiary venation, often with tertiary veins parallel to secondary ones, initially woolly on midrib beneath, otherwise glabrous.
- Flowers in 2-9-flowered clusters, borne on 8-20 mm long pedicels, pale yellow.
- Fruit obovoid or ellipsoid, 2.5-3.5 cm long, glabrous (often except at base and apex) and green.
P. semaram is fairly common in lowland forest (up to 500 m altitude), but occurs scattered in the forest, often in marshy places. The timber is dark brown, with a density of 680-820 kg/m3 at 15% moisture content.
Selected sources
36, 102, 190, 318, 743, 779, 792.
Main genus page
Authors
- R.H.M.J. Lemmens (selection of species)