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Record Number

4833

PROSEA Handbook Number

5(3): Timber trees; Lesser-known timbers

Taxon

Alphitonia Reissek ex Endl.

Protologue

Gen. pl.: 1098 (1840).

Family

RHAMNACEAE

Chromosome Numbers

x = unknown; 2n = unknown

Vernacular Names

Papua New Guinea: white almond (En).

Origin and Geographic Distribution

Alphitonia comprises about 10 species occurring in Borneo, the Philippines, the Lesser Sunda Islands (Timor), the Moluccas, New Guinea, Australia and in the Pacific east to the Marquesas Islands and Hawaii. Only 2 species occur in Malesia.

Uses

The wood of Alphitonia is used for temporary construction, house building (posts, rafters), interior finish, cabinet making, furniture, mouldings, turnery, veneer, joinery, flooring, vehicle bodies, barrels, fencing and axe handles. It yields a good firewood and is suitable for the production of pulp.
The bark of A. excelsa has been used for rope in the Philippines and as soap in the Moluccas. It has also been used in tanning. Its wood has been used to dye cloth red-brown or orange-yellow. In Australia the leaves are used as fodder. In Papua New Guinea Alphitonia is regarded as suitable for reforestation purposes.

Production and International Trade

Alphitonia wood is used mainly on a local scale. In 1996 Papua New Guinea exported 515 m3 of "white almond"" logs at an average free-on-board (FOB) price of US$ 95/m3.

Properties

A. macrocarpa yields a lightweight to medium-weight hardwood with a density of 360-650 kg/m3 at 12% moisture content, A. excelsa is a medium-weight to occasionally heavy timber with a density of 685 to over 830 kg/m3. Heartwood pink-brown, sapwood straw-coloured; wood occasionally streaky and always with a smell of "sarsaparilla"" (Smilax spp.). Growth rings indistinct; vessels small to medium-sized, solitary and in radial multiples of 2-4 occasionally over 4, with dark gummy and white deposits; parenchyma sparse, paratracheal vasicentric or apotracheal in irregularly spaced bands; rays moderately fine; ripple marks absent.
Shrinkage upon air drying is moderate. The wood of A. macrocarpa is weak and non-durable but that of A. excelsa is strong and moderately durable. The sapwood is non-susceptible to Lyctus.
The bark of A. excelsa shows antibacterial activity. The average fibre length of A. excelsa wood is 1.04 mm and it is suitable for chemical pulping having a high pulp yield and requiring comparatively few chemicals.
See also the tables on microscopic wood anatomy and wood properties.

Botany

Evergreen, small to fairly large trees up to 40 m tall; bole straight, up to 100 cm in diameter, branchless for up to 20 m, without buttresses; bark surface smooth, greyish to whitish or greenish-brown, pustular, inner bark greenish or straw-coloured with spicy odour. Buds and young twigs often densely brownish pubescent. Leaves alternate, simple, entire, whitish or rusty pubescent below; stipules small, caducous. Inflorescence an axillary or rarely terminal, many-flowered cyme. Flowers bisexual, small, whitish to greenish, 5-merous; hypanthium saucer-shaped to hemispherical; sepals keeled within; petals clawed, hooded; disk thick, nectariferous; ovary inferior, 2-3-locular with 1 ovule in each cell, style short, 2-3-lobed. Fruit a globose to broadly ovoid drupe with 2-3 dehiscent stones; mesocarp thick, mealy. Seed almost completely enclosed in a loose, membranous, reddish-brown aril; testa smooth.
A. excelsa develops according to Roux's architectural tree model, characterized by a continuously growing monopodial orthotropic trunk with plagiotropic branches. In the Philippines A. excelsa is considered a fast-growing species. Seeds are eaten and dispersed by birds.

Ecology

Alphitonia is a fairly common element of lowland to montane, disturbed or secondary rain forest, up to 2500 m altitude. In Papua New Guinea A. excelsa can be found in the dry savanna belt in the south-east; in Australia it is reported to grow sometimes on very poor sandy soils. A. macrocarpa is found in the montane regions of Papua New Guinea, especially in secondary forest and in fallow vegetation.

Silviculture and Management

Alphitonia is reputed to have pioneer characteristics.

Genetic Resources and Breeding

As harvesting of Alphitonia timber is limited, genetic erosion is not a major risk.

Prospects

It is unlikely that the use of Alphitonia timber, at least in South-East Asia, will increase in the near future, due to its relatively sparse occurrence.

Literature

[46]Anderson, J.A.R., 1980. A checklist of the trees of Sarawak. Forest Department, Sarawak. Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka, Kuala Lumpur. 364 pp.
[135]Braid, K.W., 1925. Revision of the genus Alphitonia. Kew Bulletin 1925: 168-186.
[150]Brown, W.H., 1951-1957. Useful plants of the Philippines. Reprint of the 1941-1943 edition. 3 volumes. Technical Bulletin 10. Department of Agriculture and Natural Resources. Bureau of Printing, Manila. Vol. 1(1951) 590 pp., Vol. 2 (1954) 513 pp., Vol. 3 (1957) 507 pp.
[163]Burkill, I.H., 1966. A dictionary of the economic products of the Malay Peninsula. 2nd edition. Ministry of Agriculture and Co-operatives, Kuala Lumpur. Vol. 1 (A-H) pp. 1-1240. Vol. 2 (I-Z) pp. 1241-2444.
[304]Eddowes, P.J., 1995-1997. The forests and timbers of Papua New Guinea. (unpublished data).
[348]Forest Products Research Centre, 1967. Properties and uses of Papua and New Guinea timbers. Forest Products Research Centre, Port Moresby. 30 pp.
[355]Francia, P.C., 1973. Proximate chemical composition of some fast-growing woods from the Bislig forest. Forepride Digest 2(2): 42.
[402]Hallé, F., Oldeman, R.A.A. & Tomlinson, P.B., 1978. Tropical trees and forests - an architectural analysis. Springer Verlag, Berlin, Heidelberg, New York. 441 pp.
[436]Heyne, K., 1927. De nuttige planten van Nederlands-Indië [The useful plants of the Dutch East Indies]. 2nd edition, 3 volumes. Departement van Landbouw, Nijverheid en Handel in Nederlandsch-Indië. 1953 pp. (3rd edition, 1950. van Hoeve, 's-Gravenhage/Bandung. 1660 pp.).
[447]Hoogland, R.D., 1961. The identity of Glochidion ? cinerascens Miq. and of Rhamnus incanus Roxb. Kew Bulletin 14: 33.
[464]Ilic, J., 1990. The CSIRO macro key for hardwood identification. CSIRO, Highett. 125 pp.
[553]Kessler, P.J.A. & Sidiyasa, K., 1994. Trees of the Balikpapan-Samarinda area, East Kalimantan, Indonesia. Tropenbos Series 7. The Tropenbos Foundation, Wageningen. 446 pp.
[568]Kingston, R.S.T. & Risdon, C.J.E., 1961. Shrinkage and density of Australian and other South-West Pacific woods. Technological Paper No 13. Division of Forest Products, CSIRO, Melbourne. 65 pp.
[739]Maiden, J.H., 1902-1925. The forest flora of New South Wales. 8 volumes. Government Printers, Sydney.
[955]Rocafort, J.E., Floresca, A.R. & Siopongco, J.O., 1971. Fourth progress report on the specific gravity of Philippine woods. Philippine Architecture, Engineering & Construction Report 18(5): 17-27.
[974]Salvosa, F.M., 1963. Lexicon of Philippine trees. Bulletin No 1. Forest Products Research Institute, College, Laguna. 136 pp.
[1048]Soepadmo, E., Wong, K.M. & Saw, L.G. (Editors), 1995-. Tree flora of Sabah and Sarawak. Sabah Forestry Department, Forest Research Institute Malaysia and Sarawak Forestry Department, Kepong.
[1070]Suessenguth, K., 1953. Rhamnaceae. In: Engler, A. & Prantl, K. (Editors): Die natürlichen Pflanzenfamilien. Band 20d. Duncker & Humblot, Berlin. pp. 7-173.
[1090]Tavita, Y.L. & Palisoc, J.G., 1979. Morphological characteristics of some Philippine hardwoods and other plant fibres. Forpride Digest 8(3-4): 31-47.
[1222]Whitmore, T.C., Tantra, I.G.M. & Sutisna, U., 1986-1990. Tree flora of Indonesia. Checklists for Sumatra, Sulawesi, Bali, Nusa Tenggara & Timor, Maluku and Kalimantan. 6 volumes. Agency for Forestry Research and Development, Forest Research and Development Centre, Bogor.
[1232]Wisse, J.H., 1965. Volumegewichten van een aantal houtmonsters uit West Nieuw Guinea [Specific gravity of some wood samples from West New Guinea]. Afdeling Bosexploitatie en Boshuishoudkunde, Landbouwhogeschool, Wageningen. 23 pp.

Author(s)

C. Schirarend

Alphitonia excelsa
Alphitonia macrocarpa

Correct Citation of this Article

Schirarend, C., 1998. Alphitonia Reissek ex Endl.. In: Sosef, M.S.M., Hong, L.T. and Prawirohatmodjo, S. (Editors): Plant Resources of South-East Asia No 5(3): Timber trees; Lesser-known timbers. PROSEA Foundation, Bogor, Indonesia. Database record: prota4u.org/prosea

Selection of Species

The following species in this genus are important in this commodity group and are treated separatedly in this database:
Alphitonia excelsa
Alphitonia macrocarpa

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