Diospyros venosa explained

Diospyros venosa is a tree in the family Ebenaceae. It is native to Southeast Asia, from the Maluku Islands to Myanmar. It provides raw material for handicrafts, traditional medicine and fuel.

Description

Diospyros venosa grows as a tree, sometimes a shrub, from 5m–20mm (16feet–70feetm) tall.[1] Inflorescences bear up to 25 flowers. The fruits are ellipsoid to roundish, up to 2.50NaN0 in diameter.

Taxonomy

The specific epithet Latin: [[:wikt:venosus|venosa]] is from the Latin meaning 'veined', referring to the leaf.

D. venosa has an accepted infraspecific variety, D. venosa var. olivacea.

Within the genus Diospyros, there is the geographically heterogenous clade XI, with sister species from India, Sri Lanka, Southeast Asia and New Caledonia. D. venosa is a member along with D. ebenum, D. ehretioides, D. fasciculosa, D. maritima, D. pubicalyx, D. styraciformis, and D. wallichii.[2]

Distribution

Diospyros venosa var. venosa is native to the Maluku Islands, Borneo, Java, Sumatra, Peninsular Malaysia, Thailand, Cambodia and Myanmar.

The var. olivacea is endemic to Peninsular Malaysia.

Habitat

Its habitat is lowland mixed dipterocarp forests, though it occurs up to 1300m elevation. In the Guning Aias Forest Reserve, Pahang, Malaysia, the Lowland dipterocarp forest has a 30-40m tall canopy of trees in the Anacardiaceae, Dipterocarpaceae, Euphorbiaceae, Fabaceae, Sapotaceae, and Sterculiaceae families.[3] Amongst the understorey plants is D. venosa var. venosa.Within the Ayer Hitam Forest Reserve, Selangor, D. venosa grows as a tree to 10m height, throughout the reserves from the Lowland dipterocarp forest to the lower montane forest at 1300m.The tree/shrub was one of the characteristic plants in the upper elevations (375-450m) ridge and slope community within the Seraya-ridge forest of the Semangkok Forest Reserve, Selangor, Malaysia.[4] The seraya-ridge forest is a subtype of Hill dipterocarp forest, characterised by the dipterocarp Shorea curtisii and the palm Eugeissona tristis, the most common type of hill forest in Peninsular Malaysia.

Vernacular names

In Malaysia it is known as kayu arang (a general name for Diospyros species).[5] In the Khmer language, angɔt kmao and ângkât' khmau slëk thôm[1] refer to the plant.

Uses

Twigs from the plant are used as firewood. The ebony-like wood is used to make luxury knick-knacks. The roots are used in a traditional medicine decoction as a sedative, as well as a component of a tonic.[1] Villagers living on the plateau of Phnom Kulen National Park, in Svay Leu District, Siem Reap Province, northwestern Cambodia, use the root and wood chips of the shrub in their traditional medicinal practices to improve post-partum care and circulation, to treat malaria, and to treat sexually transmitted diseases in women.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Pauline Dy Phon . Plants Utilised In Cambodia/Plantes utilisées au Cambodge . 2000 . Imprimerie Olympic . Phnom Penh . 14, 15 . Pauline Dy Phon .
  2. Duangjai . Sutee . Samuel . Rosabelle . Munzinger . Jérôme . Forest . Félix . Wallnöfer . Bruno . Barfuss . Michael H.J. . Fischer . Gunter . Chase . Mark W. . A multi-locus plastid phylogenetic analysis of the pantropical genus Diospyros (Ebenaceae), with an emphasis on the radiation and biogeographic origins of the New Caledonian endemic species . Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution . 2009 . 52 . 3 . 602–620 . 10.1016/j.ympev.2009.04.021 . 19427384 . 11 May 2020.
  3. Chua . L.S.L. . et al . A checklist of seed plants at Gunung Aias Forest Reserve, Pahang, Peninsular Malaysia . Malayan Nature Journal . 2006 . 59 . 2 . 121–52 . 11 May 2020.
  4. Kassim . Abd. Rahman . Species assembly and site preference of tree species in a primary Seraya-ridge forest of Peninsular Malaysia . Journal of Tropical Forest Science . 2002 . 14 . 3 . 287–303 . 11 May 2020.
  5. Faridah Hanum . I. . Ibrahim . A. Z. . Shamsul Khamis . Nazre . M. . Lepun . P. . Rusea . G. . Lajuni . J. J. . Latiff . A. . An Annotated Checklist of Higher Plants in Ayer Hitam Forest Reserve, Puchong, Selangor . Pertanika J. Trop. Agric. Sci. . 2001 . 24 . 1 . 63–78 . 11 May 2020 . Universiti Putra Malaysia Press . 1511-3701.
  6. Walker . Taylor J. . An examination of medicinal ethnobotany and biomedicine use in two villages on the Phnom Kulen plateau . 26 April 2017 . Undergraduate Research Awards, Hollins University . Roanoke, United States . 27 April 2020.