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Xylocarpus mekongensis Pierre
Much branched, deciduous tree upto
20 m high, buttresses very insignificant or absent.
Well developed aerial root-suckers or
peg-like pneumatophores are present.
Bark dark red to almost blackish, longitudinally
fissured.
Leaf compound, usually with 4 leaflets,
paripinnate, opposite, superimposed or alternate, cauline, exstipulate
Lamina ovate-elliptic or elliptic entire,
slightly mucronate, cup-shaped, apex acute, dark green, unicostate, reticulate
venation
Inflorescence 10-35 flowered, panicle,
upto 8 cm long, mainly axilllary
Flowers irregular, tetramerous, erect.
pedicellate
Sepals 4, free, valvate, ovate, 0.15 cm
long and 0.2 cm broad, green, blunt, entire, coriaceous, glabrous, deciduous
petals 8, gamopetalous, globose tube,
basal periphery larger than the apical periphery, 8 apical short
lobe, lobe ovate, petal white, thin, herbaceous, glabrous, deciduous, shorter
than calyx
Stamens 8, epipetalous, attached at the
notch of apical lobe, short filament, white, round, glabrous, soft, dorsifixed,
anther bilobed, longitudinal dehiscence, introrse, globose, inserted, inferior
Carpels 8, syncarpous, ovary superior,
globose, 8 chambered, two ovules in each chamber, axile placentation, style
1, terminal 0.1 cm long, round, soft, gradually tapering, white glabrous
Stigma 1, flat 0.1 cm diam
Fruit smaller than X. granatum
upto 10 cm diam., green, leathery, contains 4-10 seeds, buoyant, dispersed
by water currents.
Economic Importance : Timber yielding
plant. Bark is astringent and used in dysentry, diarrhoea and other troubles
and febrifuge.
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