Elaeocarpus floribundus Bl.,
Bijdr. (1825)
Latin for 'with many flowers'.
Description
Upper canopy tree up to 49 m tall and 84 cm dbh. Stipules dropped early.
Leaves alternate, simple, penni-veined, glabrous or with scales (scurvy like),
petioles long, leaf margin usually toothed. Flowers ca. 8 mm in diameter,
white-yellow, petal margins fimbriate, placed in racemes. Fruits ca. 22 mm long,
green, fleshy drupes.
Ecology
In undisturbed mixed dipterocarp, sub-montane and keranga forests up to 900
m altitude. Usually on hillsides and ridges with sandy to clay soils. In
secondary forests usually present as a pre-disturbance remnant tree.
Uses
Fruits are edible.
Distribution
India, Anadaman Islands, Indo-China, Thailand, Peninsular Malaysia, Sumatra,
Java, Lesser Sunda Islands, Borneo (Sarawak, Sabah, West- and East-Kalimantan),
Philippines, Celebes.
Local names in Borneo
Empedu, Empeduk, Emperdok, Irat, Kungkurad, Perdu.
