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Record Number

4937

PROSEA Handbook Number

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

Taxon

Atuna Raf.

Protologue

Sylva tellur.: 153 (1838).

Family

CHRYSOBALANACEAE

Chromosome Numbers

x = unknown; 2n = unknown

Vernacular Names

Merbatu (trade name).

Origin and Geographic Distribution

Atuna comprises 8 species which occur in southern India, Thailand and throughout the Malesian region (except for the Lesser Sunda Islands) towards Fiji and Samoa. In Malesia 5 species occur. The genus is very rare in Java and Sulawesi.

Uses

The wood of Atuna is used for house building (beams and rafters), posts and poles (temporary), and especially for salt-water piling and other marine constructions. It is also suitable for parquet flooring and railway sleepers. It provides good fuelwood and good-quality charcoal.
In Ambon a dish called "koku koku"" is prepared from the mashed seeds of A. racemosa subsp. excelsa mixed with fish, ginger, onions, chillies and lime juice. In the Solomon Islands pounded seeds of the same species are used to caulk boats and to waterproof bottles made from gourds; the uses of the oil extracted from the seeds include to scent coconut oil and for hairdressing. The bark and pounded seeds are used medicinally against diarrhoea. In Fiji the leaves are used to thatch the outside walls of houses.

Production and International Trade

Atuna wood is most likely traded in mixed consignments of medium-weight hardwood or together with that of the genera Maranthes and Parinari as "merbatu"". Supplies are, however, limited.

Properties

Atuna yields a medium-weight to heavy hardwood with a density of 685-1000 kg/m3 at 15% moisture content. Heartwood pale brown to red-brown, not clearly demarcated from the paler to white sapwood; grain straight, occasionally interlocked; texture rather fine; wood sometimes fairly indistinctly streaked. Growth rings indistinct, occasionally locally marked by darker zones containing reduced amounts of vessels and parenchyma; vessels medium-sized to very large, almost exclusively solitary; parenchyma abundant, banded in narrow bands; rays fine, visible with a hand lens; ripple marks absent.
The wood seasons with little degrade. It is hard and fairly strong and is very difficult to cut and saw due to its high silica content, but can easily be split for firewood. It is non-durable in contact with the ground or when exposed to the weather, is not resistant to termites, but is fairly resistant to marine borer attack in salt-water. The sapwood is non-susceptible to Lyctus.
See also the table on microscopic wood anatomy.

Botany

Small to large trees up to 45 m tall; bole up to 100 cm in diameter, fluted at base or with short buttresses; bark surface smooth, often lenticellate, becoming cracked or patchy, with adherent scales, grey, grey-green or black, often with white mottles, inner bark fibrous, hard and gritty, orange-brown or red-brown to purplish, without exudate. Leaves alternate, simple, entire, almost glabrous, the veins usually papillose below; stipules keeled, caducous. Inflorescence an axillary raceme or contracted panicle. Flowers bisexual, zygomorphic, with an obconical to cylindrical receptacle and 5 unequal sepals; petals 5, white; stamens 10-20, filaments free and inserted unilaterally on the margin of the disk; ovary inserted at or near the top of the receptacle, 2-locular with a single ovule in each cell, style 1, emerging from the base of the ovary. Fruit a fairly large, hard drupe, crustaceously warty, splitting irregularly to reveal the fibrous interior; cotyledons strongly ruminate. Seedling with hypogeal germination; cotyledons not emergent; hypocotyl not developed; all leaves alternate.
The ultimate shoots show a complicated system of divaricate branching. The fruits are dispersed by ocean currents, by a scatter-hoarding squirrel and possibly by wild pigs. A. racemosa subsp. racemosa has been observed to flower in January in Java and to fruit in February in Sumatra.
The family Chrysobalanaceae has sometimes been treated as a subfamily of the Rosaceae. Atuna is closely related to the pantropical genus Parinari. A. racemosa has been divided into 2 subspecies: subsp. racemosa is found throughout the range of the species except for Java, whereas subsp. excelsa (Jack) Prance occurs in Peninsular Malaysia, Sumatra, Java, Borneo, and North Sulawesi.

Ecology

Atuna is found as an understorey or canopy tree in well-drained evergreen lowland and hill forest, often in mixed dipterocarp forest, up to 800 m altitude. A. racemosa subsp. racemosa is also found along rivers, in freshwater or brackish swamps and even in mangrove forest. A. cordata is locally common in hill forest on ultrabasic rock up to 1200 m altitude.

Silviculture and Management

Atuna can be propagated by seed. About 280 dry fruits/kg have been counted for A. racemosa subsp. racemosa.

Genetic Resources and Breeding

There are no records of conservation of Atuna species, except for a few specimens in botanical gardens. Deforestation may easily endanger those species with a narrow geographical distribution.

Prospects

As Atuna timber is resistant to marine borers, especially when pressure-treated with appropriate preservatives, it will probably continue to be used for marine constructions.

Literature

[162]Burgess, P.F., 1966. Timbers of Sabah. Sabah Forest Records No 6. Forest Department, Sabah, Sandakan. xviii + 501 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.
[198]Cockburn, P.F., 1976-1980. Trees of Sabah. 2 volumes. Sabah Forest Records No 10. Forest Department Sabah, Sandakan.
[261]den Berger, L.G. & Endert, F.H., 1925. Belangrijke houtsoorten van Nederlandsch-Indië, deel I [Important timbers of the Dutch East Indies, part I]. Mededeelingen No 11. Proefstation voor het Boschwezen, Buitenzorg. 136 pp.
[267]Desch, H.E., 1941-1954. Manual of Malayan timbers. Malayan Forest Records No 15. 2 volumes. Malaya Publishing House Ltd., Singapore. 762 pp.
[341]Flora Malesiana (various editors), 1950-. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, Boston, London.
[405]Hardjowasono, M.S., 1942. Gewicht en volume van verschillende vrucht- en zaadsoorten [Weight and volume of various fruits and seeds]. Korte Mededelingen No 20. Bosbouwproefstation, Buitenzorg. 172 pp.
[431]Henderson, C.P. & Hancock, I.R., 1989. A guide to the useful plants of the Solomon Islands. Research Department, Ministry of Agriculture and Lands, Honiara. xiii + 481 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.).
[615]Kostermans, A.J.G.H., 1965. A monograph of the genera Maranthes Bl. and Cyclandrophora Hassk. (Chrysobalanaceae) of the Asiatic and Pacific area. Candollea 20: 103-158.
[621]Kostermans, A.J.G.H., 1969. Atuna Rafin. versus Cyclandrophora Hassk. (Rosaceae - Chrysobalanoideae). Reinwardtia 7: 421-422.
[632]Kraemer, J.H., 1951. Trees of the western Pacific region. Tri-State Offset Company, Cincinnatti. 436 pp.
[829]Ng, F.S.P., 1991-1992. Manual of forest fruits, seeds and seedlings. 2 volumes. Malayan Forest Record No 34. Forest Research Institute Malaysia, Kepong. 997 pp.
[861]Oey Djoen Seng, 1951. De soortelijke gewichten van Indonesische houtsoorten en hun betekenis voor de praktijk [Specific gravity of Indonesian woods and its significance for practical use]. Rapport No 46. Bosbouwproefstation, Bogor. 183 pp.
[903]Prance, G.T., 1987. Notulae de chrysobalanaceis malesianis praecursoriae. Brittonia 39: 364-370.
[904]Prance, G.T. & Mori, S.A., 1979. Flora Neotropica Monograph No 21. Lecythidaceae - part 1. The New York Botanical Garden, New York. 270 pp.
[934]Reyes, L.J., 1938. Philippine woods. Technical Bulletin No 7. Commonwealth of the Philippines, Department of Agriculture and Commerce. Bureau of Printing, Manila. 536 pp. + 88 plates.
[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.
[1221]Whitmore, T.C. & Ng, F.S.P. (Editors), 1972-1989. Tree flora of Malaya. A manual for foresters. 4 volumes. Malayan Forest Records No 26. Longman Malaysia Sdn. Berhad, Kuala Lumpur & Petaling Jaya.

Author(s)

G.T. Prance

Atuna cordata
Atuna racemosa

Correct Citation of this Article

Prance, G.T., 1998. Atuna Raf.. 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:
Atuna cordata
Atuna racemosa

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