Cassia (PROSEA Timbers)
Introduction |
Cassia L.
- Protologue: Sp. pl. 1: 376 (1753); Gen. pl., ed. 5: 178 (1754).
- Family: Leguminosae
- Chromosome number: x= 12, 14; C. javanica: n= 12, 2n= 28
Vernacular names
- Johar (trade name)
- Indonesia: bobondelan (Sundanese), boking-boking (Sumatra), trengguli (Javanese)
- Malaysia: bebusok, busok-busok (Peninsular)
- Philippines: pink shower (En), antsoan (Bikol)
- Cambodia: bô prùk'
- Laos: khoun loy2
- Thailand: chaiyaphruk, kalapaphruk (central), kalaphruk (northern)
- Vietnam: bù cạp.
Origin and geographic distribution
Cassia in the narrow sense comprises about 30 species with a pantropical distribution. Only a few species occur naturally in tropical Asia, and only 3 in Malesia. Cassia javanica L. is the only species with some importance as a timber tree. It occurs in India, Burma (Myanmar), Indo-China, southern China, Thailand and throughout Malesia. It has been planted for so long that the natural area of distribution is difficult to reconstruct. It is also planted as an ornamental in Central and South America. C. grandis L. f. and C. fistula L. have been introduced into the Malesian area for ornamental purposes.
Uses
The wood of a few Cassia species, particularly C. javanica , is used for general construction, furniture and cabinet making.
Cassia is a well-known ornamental or roadside tree; several species are planted for this purpose. Some of the introduced ornamental species grow to medium-sized trees and may provide larger sizes of timber when cut. Some species are valued medicinal plants (e.g. C. fistula ). C. javanica is also extensively used as an ornamental and roadside tree, particularly forms of subsp. agnes (de Wit) K. Larsen with larger flowers. The bark has been used for tanning leather, but the amount of tannin is comparatively low. The pods and seeds are used in local medicine; they are purgative.
Production and international trade
Cassia timber is not traded in large amounts on the international market, but the heartwood in particular is exported in small volumes and is locally in demand as it is decorative and durable.
Properties
C. javanica yields a lightweight to heavy hardwood with a density of 400-875 kg/m3at 15% moisture content. Heartwood pale yellow when fresh, turning red or pale orange-brown with age, demarcated sharply or not sharply from the 2-5 cm wide white sapwood; grain interlocked; texture moderately fine; taste bitter. Growth rings not always distinct, the boundaries indicated by a fine line of parenchyma forming a more or less distinct, but interrupted ring; vessels medium-sized to moderately large, solitary and in radial pairs, reddish gummy deposits in many vessels; parenchyma abundant, apotracheal diffuse, and paratracheal vasicentric, aliform to confluent, the latter connecting 2-4 vessels; rays very fine, not visible to the naked eye; ripple marks occasionally locally just discernable.
Shrinkage of the wood is low; it seasons well with little or no degrade. The wood is hard and strong. It works well and finishes well. The sapwood is very perishable, the heartwood moderately durable when exposed to the weather or in contact with the ground, and very durable for interior work. The sapwood is susceptible to Lyctus .
See also the tables on microscopic wood anatomy and wood properties.
Botany
A semi-deciduous, small to medium-sized, sometimes fairly large tree up to 25(-40) m tall; bole often curved, up to 60 cm in diameter, small buttresses sometimes present, trunk of young trees and branches either smooth or spiny; bark surface smooth, sometimes shallowly longitudinally fissured, greyish to pale brown or red-brown, sometimes blackish mottled, inner bark yellow to orange. Leaves alternate, distichous, paripinnate with up to 17(-20) pairs of leaflets; stipules 2-lobed, caducous. Flowers in an axillary or terminal, many-flowered, subsessile, distinctly bracteate raceme, 5-merous; calyx deeply divided, lobes firm, imbricate, reflexed; petals widely spreading, whitish to reddish or buff; stamens 10, irregularly accrescent toward the abaxial side of the flower, longest ones S-shaped; ovary superior, linear and curved, stigma terminal or subterminal. Fruit a woody, pendulous, short stiped, linear pod with septa between the numerous seeds, indehiscent, dark brown to black. Seed brown, smooth and glossy, lying transverse in the pod. Seedling with epigeal germination; cotyledons emergent, semi-fleshy; first few leaves arranged spirally.
C. javanica trees show Troll's architectural model, with sympodial growth and all axes plagiotropic, the architecture being built by their continual superposition. In East Java C. javanica flowers in October-December and fruits in the dry season. It has been observed flowering and fruiting in a mast fruiting year in Peninsular Malaysia.
Until the beginning of the 1980s, Cassia was considered to be a very large genus of over 500 species, but then the genus was split into 3 genera: Cassia sensu stricto, Senna and Chamaecrista . Cassia s.s. includes far fewer species than the latter two genera that have approximately 270 and 250 species, respectively. C. javanica is very polymorphic and several subspecies are distinguished. C. agnes (de Wit) Brenan, C. bartonii F.M. Bailey, C. nodosa Buch.-Ham. ex Roxb. and C. renigera Wallich ex Benth. are all reduced to one of these subspecies.
Ecology
C. javanica is usually found in more open sites in the forest, up to 400 m altitude, but can also occur in closed evergreen primary forest. It is often naturalized in secondary forest close to locations where it has been planted. In Java it has been reported from fertile volcanic loams, and from marshy, sandy and limestone soils.
Silviculture C. javanica can be propagated by seed or by vegetative means. There are 5700-8400 dry seeds/kg. Pods can easily be collected from the ground and have to be opened with a chopping knife. Seed storage is variable: fresh seed can be stored for only 3 weeks in airtight containers, but storing dry seeds for over one year is also reported. Seeds start to germinate after 7 days and 80% of the seedlings appear within in 14-30 days. The germination rate is about 70%; 50% of the seed sown yields good plants. Other records, however, show a germination rate of 20-65% in 5 days to well over one year. For India, where late and prolonged germination is a problem, it is reported that mechanical scarification may be used to overcome seed dormancy. The planting of large cuttings of C. javanica in the Philippines was unsuccessful as only 10% of the cuttings survived. Air layering failed altogether. C. javanica is not resistant to fire.
Genetic resources and breeding
C. javanica is rather common in several areas and, moreover, is extensively planted. It is not endangered or liable to genetic erosion.
Prospects
C. javanica seems worth trying as a timber plantation tree. It is considered to grow comparatively fast and may provide timber of fair quality. In addition it is an attractive tree, offering the potential of combining its uses as an ornamental and timber tree.
Literature
70, 161, 163, 183, 198, 209, 235, 255, 261, 267, 343, 402, 405, 436, 471, 473, 780, 829, 831, 861, 934, 955, 1023, 1163, 1198, 1221, 1226, 1242.
B. Ibnu Utomo W.