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Neolamarckia cadamba, with English common names burflower-tree, laran, and
Leichhardt pine, and called kadam or cadamba locally, is an evergreen,
tropical tree native to South and Southeast Asia. The genus name honours
French naturalist Jean-Baptiste Lamarck. It has scented orange flowers in
dense globe-shaped clusters. The flowers are used in perfumes. The tree is
grown as an ornamental plant and for timber and paper-making. Kadam
features in Indian religions and mythologies.
Description
A fully mature tree can reach up to 45 m (148 ft) in height It is a large
tree with a broad crown and straight cylindrical bole. It is quick growing,
with broad spreading branches and grows rapidly in the first 6–8 years. The
trunk has a diameter of 100–160 cm, but typically less than that. Leaves
are 13–32 cm (5.1–12.6 in) long. Flowering usually begins when the tree is
4–5 years old.
Its flowers are sweetly fragrant, red to orange in colour, occurring in
dense, globular heads of approximately 5.5 cm (2.2 in) diameter. The fruit
of N. cadamba occur in small, fleshy capsules packed closely together to
form a fleshy yellow-orange infructescence containing approximately 8000
seeds. On maturing, the fruit splits apart, releasing the seeds, which are
then dispersed by wind or rain.
Stamens 5, inserted on the corolla tube, filaments short, anthers
basifixed. Ovary inferior, bi-locular, sometimes 4-locular in the upper
part, style exserted and a spindle-shaped stigma.
Fruitlets numerous with their upper parts containing 4 hollow or solid
structures. Seed trigonal or irregularly shaped.
The sapwood is white with a light-yellow tinge becoming creamy yellow on
exposure and is not clearly differentiated from the heartwood.
Ecology    Leaves & flower buds
Kadamba tree lower trunk
N. cadamba is native to the following areas:
Southern China
Indian subcontinent: India (n. & w.); Bangladesh; Nepal; Sri Lanka
Southeast Asia: Cambodia; Laos; Myanmar; Thailand; Vietnam, Indonesia;
Malaysia; Papua New Guinea; Australia
It is an introduced species in Puerto Rico at Toro Negro State Forest.
The larvae of Moduza procris, a brush-footed butterfly, and Arthroschista
hilaralis, a moth, consume this species. The flowers attract pollinators.
KR IRS 231024

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