MarketMallotus tetracoccus
Company Profile

Mallotus tetracoccus

Mallotus tetracoccus, also known as the rusty kamala, is a species of flowering plant in the family Euphorbiaceae. It is a tree species found in parts of south Asia, typically occurring in the edges of tropical wet evergreen and semi-evergreen forests.

Description
This is a distinctive mid-sized or mid-storey tree species growing up to around 15 m tall. The bark is 5–8 mm thick with a grey surface, smooth and fibrous. The tree gains its rusty or coppery-white appearance from the colours of the branchlets, young parts, and undersides of leaves. The branchlets and young parts are densely grey or tawny tomentose (hairy) and the young parts are covered by rusty lepidote scales. The underside of leaves is velvety white due to stellate hairs, contrasting with the bright green and glabrous upper surface. The thinly leathery leaves are simple, alternate, and spirally arranged on the twigs. The lamina is 8–25 cm long x 6.5–20 cm broad, and variable in shape from young saplings to large trees, ranging from more or less circular to deltoid or broadly egg-shaped. The leaf apex is acuminate, and the base truncate, nearly heart-shaped or round. The leaves are peltate (prominently in young plants, more narrowly in adult trees). The leaf margin is entire or glandular dentate (toothed or lobed). The leaves are usually prominently 3-5 ribbed from base, with lateral nerves 6-8 pairs, the tertiary nerves running nearly horizontal. The stipules are lateral and fall off, while the leaf also has a long petiole (4.5–10 cm) which is stout and swollen at the base, stellate tomentose along the length, and with two glands at the top. The species is dioecious (unisexual) with male and female flowers on different individual trees. The inflorescences are terminal, branched, panicles about 12–20 cm long, on stout peduncles, holding rusty tomentose buds and yellow or yellowish-white flowers. The male flowers are 7 mm across, with 4 tepals (2 mm) and ovate containing many stamens (filaments to 3 mm). Female flowers are 5 mm across and with 4 tepals (2 mm). The ovary is tomentose, often 4-loculed, and the style, often 4 (or 5), is about 3 mm long and feathery. The fruiting pedicel is about 5 mm long attached to a fruit (1 cm in diameter) which is a depressed roundish capsule covered in gray tomentose and softly spiny stellate hairs. The seeds (ca. 5 mm) are blackish brown, rounded and wedge shaped (angular). ==Taxonomy==
Taxonomy
The following are recognized as synonyms of Mallotus tetracoccus: Mallotus albus var. occidentalis Hook.f., Mallotus ferrugineus (Roxb.) Müll.Arg., Rottlera ferruginea Roxb., and Rottlera tetracocca Roxb. ==Local names==
Local names
The species is known in several languages across its range, including (in alphabetical order of the language): Loru-bondha/Morolia (Assamese), Marleya (Bengali), Laidolor biphang (Bodo), Ilikambo (Idu Mishmi), Uppale (Kannada), Upper Myanmar: Petwaing, Thavatta/Vatta/Vattakkumbil/Kazhuvakkaradi/Porivatta (Malayalam). ==Distribution and habitat==
Distribution and habitat
The species occurs in India (Northeast India and South India), Sri Lanka, Upper Myanmar, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh (Chittagong Hill Tracts), Thailand, and south-central China. Within the Western Ghats of India, it is distributed from the Konkan southwards in semi-evergreen to evergreen and shola forests, from the plains to about 1600 m elevation. It also occurs in peninsular hills such as the Shevaroy Hills and Kollimalai Hills of southern India in evergreen and secondary forests. In northern India, Brandis notes the species is distributed in the outer ranges and valleys of the Sikkim Himalaya ascending to , common in second growth forest. In Sri Lanka, it is common in the moist low country. ==Ecology==
Ecology
Mallotus tetracoccus is a pioneer or early-successional or early-secondary tree species more common in forest edges, clearings, and secondary forests than in mature forest interiors. Ecophysiological studies indicate that Mallotus tetracoccus shows higher quantum use efficiency of photosynthetic system (FV/FM) at higher light conditions, with FV/FM values of 0.7407, 0.8140, 0.8020, and 0.7825 at light regimes of 10%, 25%, 50%, and 100%, respectively. As a dioecious species, a male-biased flowering sex ratio (male: female = 1.73) was reported among trees in a 20 ha plot of tropical forest at Xishuangbanna National Nature Reserve in Yunnan, south-west China. In tropical wet evergreen forests of the southern Western Ghats, India, the tree has been reported to be an edge or gap species whose fruits are consumed and seeds are dispersed by birds. The species has also been noted a wind-pollinated species showing diurnal anthesis. The flowers and seeds of Mallotus tetracoccus are reported as consumed by lion-tailed macaques in a tropical rainforest fragment in the Anaimalai hills, India. == Conservation ==
Uses
The leaves are used in sericulture. Also used as firewood in some parts. ==Gallery==
Gallery
File:Mallotus tetracoccus DSC1257.jpg|Tree (male) and branching pattern in the open File:Mallotus tetracoccus 04.JPG|Tree at forest edge File:Mallotus tetracoccus fruiting branches DSC1609.jpg|Fruiting branches File:Mallotus tetracoccus young leaf twig DSC1616.jpg|Young leaf, buds, and fruits File:Mallotus tetracoccus fruits and female flower DSC1742.jpg|Fruits (left), female flower (right) File:Mallotus tetracoccus female flower DSC1753.jpg|Female flower File:Mallotus tetracoccus male flowering twig DSC1258.jpg|Twig and male flowers File:Mallotus tetracoccus 05.JPG|Male flowers File:Mallotus tetracoccus 51.jpg|Fruits and leaves File:Mallotus tetracoccus seeds 132758159.jpg|Seeds of Mallotus tetracoccus ==References==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com