Dillenia pentagyna
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Dillenia pentagyna | |
|---|---|
| Dillenia pentagyna leaves | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Plantae |
| Clade: | Tracheophytes |
| Clade: | Angiosperms |
| Clade: | Eudicots |
| Order: | Dilleniales |
| Family: | Dilleniaceae |
| Genus: | Dillenia |
| Species: | D. pentagyna |
| Binomial name | |
| Dillenia pentagyna | |
| 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
The tree grows in the following places: Lesser Sunda Islands including Timor, Sulawesi, Jawa, Peninsular Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Hainan, South-Central China including Yunnan, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Myanmar, Bangladesh, Assam, East Himalaya, Bhutan, Nepal, India (from Punjab and Gujarat to Assam, Mizoram, Maharashtra, West Bengal and South India), and Sri Lanka.[2][4]