Dillenia excelsa

Dillenia excelsa

Dillenia excelsa is a tree that can grow up to 40 metres tall with 20 m clean trunk and 75 cm in diameter.
Flowers - Dillenia excelsa  Dillenia excelsa,Flower,Malaysia,Plant,Sabah

Appearance

Stipules absent. Leaves alternate, simple, penni-veined, margin usually entire. Flowers ca. 55 mm in diameter, yellow, placed in simple or composed racemes. Fruits ca. 28 mm long, red-purplish, dehiscent capsule with arilate seeds.
Simpoh Air (ripened fruit) Sep 26, 2015. It is a tropical tree with yellow flowers. This is the mature fruit. Dillenia excelsa,Fall,Geotagged,Malaysia,simpoh_air

Naming

Synonyms
Capallia multiflora Bl.
Capellia pauciflora Zoll. & Mor.
Dillenia excelsa var. borneensis Merr.
Dillenia excelsa var. pubescens Corn. ex Masamune
Dillenia excelsa var. tomentella Corn. ex Masamune
Dillenia glabra Martelli in Becc.
Dillenia magnoliifolia Martelli
Dillenia magnoliaefolia Martelli in Becc.
Dillenia mattanensis Martelli in Becc.
Dillenia oblonga Gilg in Engl. & Pr.
Dillenia pauciflora (Zoll. & Moritzi) Gilg
Dillenia secunda Hunter
Dillenia tomentella Martelli in Becc.
Wormia excelsa Jack
Wormia excelsa forma grandifolia Miq.
Wormia excelsa var. borneensis Miq.
Wormia excelsa var. pubescens Corn.
Wormia excelsa var. tomentella Corn.
Wormia grandifolia Miq.
Wormia oblonga Wall.
Wormia pauciflora Koord. & Val.
Wormia tomentella Ridl.

Distribution

Peninsular Thailand, Peninsular Malaysia, Sumatra, Java, Borneo, Philippines.

Habitat

In undisturbed and secondary mixed dipterocarp forests up to 700 m altitude. Mostly on alluvial sites (swamps, riversides, periodically inundated) but also found on hillsides and ridges. On sandy to clayey soils, but also on limestone.

Uses

The timber is used for house building.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

http://www.asianplant.net/Dilleniaceae/Dillenia_excelsa.htm
Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionAngiosperms
ClassEudicots
OrderDilleniales
FamilyDilleniaceae
GenusDillenia
SpeciesDillenia excelsa
Photographed in
Malaysia