Alangium oblongum Craib

Dewilde, W. J. J. O. & Duyfjes, B. E. E., 2017, Taxonomy of Alangium section Conostigma (Alangiaceae), Blumea 62 (1), pp. 29-46 : 40-43

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.3767/000651917X695164

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C90C1C-010A-B60A-FCEE-FD72D199FD6F

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Alangium oblongum Craib
status

 

15. Alangium oblongum Craib View in CoL — Fig. 5 View Fig

Alangium oblongum Craib (1930) View in CoL 426;(1931) 807. — Type: Kerr 17028 (holo

K K000704837;iso BK,BM BM000944972), Thailand, Ranong, Kampuan,

50 m alt., 6 Feb. 1928, fl. Alangium costatum auct. non (Boerl.) Boerl. ex King: King (1902) 78. Alangium ridleyi auct. non King: Evrard (1923) 1186; Tardieu (1968) 48. Alangium javanicum var. meyeri auct. non (Merr.) Berhaman: Berhaman

(1994) 35, p.p.

Tree 10–30 m tall; twigs brown, 2–4(–5) mm diam, at apex with (dense) minute hairs c. 0.1 mm long, glabrous or early glabrescent; leaf bud straight, with short minute, scale-like hairs c. 0.1 mm long. Leaves: petiole 1.2–1.5 cm long; lamina drying (greenish) brown, glabrous (early glabrescent), elliptic or elliptic-oblong, 12–25(–30) by 4–10 cm, base symmetric, (rounded or) short or long-attenuate, apex acute-acuminate; veins pinnate, 8–15 per side, loop-veined towards apex of lamina; tertiary venation reticulate or thin-scalariform. Inflorescences glabrous (or minutely hairy), of 1–3 main branches (peduncles) from the leaf axil, each few-branched, 1–5(–10)-flowered; peduncle (s) to 10 mm long. Flowers minutely hairy (hairs c. 0.1 mm long); pedicel 2 – 4 mm long; corolla in bud 12(–15) mm long, not swollen at base, apex subobtuse; ovary and calyx 2– 4 mm long, usually 10–12-ribbed; limb ± spreading, 1(–2) mm long, at margin 3.5–4 mm wide, subtruncate with straight or (faintly) lobed margin; petals 6, minutely hairy (appearing as glabrous) inside, 12–15 mm long; stamens 6, filament c. 4 mm long, hairy in upper part, not thickened at base, anther c. 8 mm long, connective glabrous; style hairy, 8–10 mm long, stigma narrowly conical. Fruit 1–3 per infructescence, ripening purplish, (sub)glabrous, ovoid-ellipsoid, 20–30(–35) mm long, usually (irregularly) coarsely bluntly (6–)10–12-ribbed; calyx remnant short, c. 5 mm wide.

Distribution — India (Nicobar Isl.), Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam; in Malesia: Sumatra (Aceh, Lankat), Peninsular Malaysia (Perlis, Kedah, Terengganu, Selangor), Borneo ( Sarawak, Sabah, Kalimantan, Natuna Isl.).

Habitat & Ecology — Primary forest, mixed dipterocarp forest, dipterocarp forest, flatland, hillside, sandy ridges, and along rivers; yellow clayey soil; 30–700 m altitude; flowering and fruiting all year round.

Uses ― Wood for constructions and canoes.

Field-notes ― Van Balgooy et al. 5357: “fruit purple, 1 seed covered by a white sweet sour juicy carcotesta, edible, favourite food of pigs and primates, very common” and Argent 9615 et al. “tree with bright red edible fruit, brought into camp to be eaten”. Bark whitish or whitish brown; stilt roots and buttresses recorded.

Vernacular names ― Taramajang boeloeh (Aceh), Jadam (Malay), Midong or Midung (Iban), Senumpul, Pangoron (Batak).

Notes — 1. Marlea costata Boerl. was described on material cultivated in the Botanical Garden in Bogor , grown from seed said to be collected by Teijsmann(?) in S Sumatra. This material (in L) is at present relegated to A. javanicum .

2. It could be imagined that three here accepted species, viz. A. oblongum , A. meyeri , and A. ridleyi are exponents of one single species, only differing in sizes and in facies, as there seem to be sufficient intermediates to connect them. However, we do not believe this, as it readily appears incredible to unite e.g. ‘typical’ A. ridleyi from Singapore, a plant with robust twigs, with A. meyeri , a plant of much more delicate stature, from Luzon. On the other hand, also A. javanicum (a species with obvious hairy leaf bud, and small fruits, 15–20 mm long), seems to intergrade with A. meyeri , typically with an indument of minute scale-like hairs. In this way, the ‘ javanicum complex’ problem, as alluded to in the introduction, is replaced by a smaller ‘ oblongum complex’ problem which again needs further study; probably some more not yet defined taxa are involved.

3. Some specimens here included in A. oblongum are cited under A. javanicum var. meyeri by Berhaman (1994).

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Magnoliopsida

Order

Cornales

Family

Cornaceae

Genus

Alangium

Loc

Alangium oblongum Craib

Dewilde, W. J. J. O. & Duyfjes, B. E. E. 2017
2017
Loc

Alangium oblongum

Craib 1930
1930
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