Dillenia pentagyna

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Dillenia pentagyna
Dillenia pentagyna leaves
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Dilleniales
Family: Dilleniaceae
Genus: Dillenia
Species:
D. pentagyna
Binomial name
Dillenia pentagyna
Roxb., Pl. Coromandel 1(1): 21, t. 20 (1795)[1]
Synonyms

Dillenia pentagyna, the dog teak or Nepali elephant apple, is a small tree with tortuous twigs. It is a member of the family Dilleniaceae, and is found from Sulawesi to South-Central China to India and Sri Lanka.

A tree some 6-15m tall, with tortuous twigs, the bark is grayish and smooth, exfoliating. Branches are glabrous and stout. Leaves are deciduous, petiolate, oblong to obovate-oblong, glabrous, 30–5 cm long, flowers appear before the leaves, 2–7 in number, yellow coloured petals, flowering starts in April–May. Fruit is globose, 0.5 cm in diameter, black ovoid seed, exarillate.[3][4][5] On islands of the Mekong in northeastern Cambodia, the tree flowers from February to March, fruits from March to April, and the leaves grow from May to November.[6]

Vernacular names

Common names by which the tree is known include: buku Tetun, Timor;[7] janti, sempu Jawa;[4] l've/lve,[3][8] chhë muëy rô:y,[3] pheng,[4] rovey,[9] muoy roy sratoap[8] Khmer; 小花五桠果;[10] xiǎo huā wǔ yā guǒ (small-flowered five tree forks fruit)[4] Chinese; ส้านช้าง sanchang, IPA: [saːn tɕʰaːŋ] Thai;[10] korkotta Bengali;[4] akshi Assam; aggai, kallai Hindi; aksikiphal, punnaga Sanskrit; agaai, taatarii,[4] tatri chinnakalinga[5] Nepali; karmal Gujarati and Marathi;[4][5] rai Oriya; kanigala, kadu-kanigala Kannada; പട്ടിപ്പുന്ന,[10] punna, kodapunna[5] Malayalam; ravudana Telugu;[5] பஞ்சகன்னி உவா,[10] naytekku,[4] kanigala[5]Tamil; dog teak English;[10] dillenia; Nepali elephant apple

Distribution

Habitat

Uses

References

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