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India: Subtropical evergreen forests at 500 – 1500 m altitudes. West Bengal, Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Meghalaya and Andaman & Nicobar Islands; Bangladesh, Bhutan, Myanmar, China, Laos, Vietnam, Thailand, Sumatra, Java and Borneo as per BSI Flora of India;
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Sikkim to Indo-China and W. Malesia as per WCSP;
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Assam; Bangladesh; Borneo; East Himalaya; Jawa; Laos; Malaya; Myanmar; Nicobar Is.; Sumatera; Thailand; Vietnam as per Catalogue of Life;
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Shrub or small tree, branchlets. Leaves ovate, 10-20*4-12cm, finely acuminate, base rounded or broadly cuneate, margins serrulate, pubescent on veins beneath, 3-veined at base with discoid glands between veins, petioles 5-15cm, bearing 2 subulate stipules 1.5-2mm, at apex stipules subulate 4-6mm. Dioceious ?; male spikes 2-4 cluatered in axils of fallen leaves, 3-10cm, flowes clustered mjinute subsessile, sepals 1mm, female racemes terminal, flowers borne singly, sepals 4-5mm. Capsules ellipsoid, 12-16mm, warted.

May-July
Subtropical forests
(Attributions- Grierson A.J.C &Long D.G. Flora of Bhutan. Volume 1 Part 3. Published by RBGE 1987 from Bhutan Biodiversity Portal)
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Alchornea tiliifolia (Euphorbiaceae) : 4 posts by 4 authors. Attachments (2)

Alchornea tiliifolia (Benth.) Müll.Arg. in Linnaea 34: 168. 1865. Stipellaria tiliifolia Benth. in Hooker’s J. Bot., Kew Gard. Misc. 6: 4. 1854 (as tiliaefolia).
Location: Nagaland.
Photographer: Dr. Santanu Dey
Habit: Shrubs or trees, 1 – 5 m high.
Habitat: Tropical evergreen forests between 500-1500 m altitudes.
Distribution: India (West Bengal, Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Meghalaya, Nagaland and Andaman & Nicobar Islands), Bhutan, Bangladesh, Myanmar, China, Laos, Vietnam, Thailand, Sumatra, Java and Borneo.

Thank you … for the post which is new to me. Fruit looks like Globba at a first glance.


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Small tree Id requested : 2 high resolution images.
Herewith I am attaching the photographs of a species for identification

Habitat-Small tree, Flowers- green minute
From Ganjam, Odisha, India


Euphorbiaceae member, some characters matching with Trewia,
Check with local flora


I could not find a match as per comparative images at Mallotus


this looks like Croton caudatua.


CROTON CAUDATUS


This appears to be a very interesting plant. The leaves/petioles as well as the capsules of Croton caudatus are said to be densely hairy–hispid unlike the plant in this thread.
I think it is more in line with Alchornea mollis (Benth.) Müll.Arg.


Yes, I fully agree. This is Alchornea mollis. The range of distribution of the species is thus extended southwards to Odisha.


I think it may be Alchornea tiliifolia (Benth.) Müll.Arg. as per images and details herein and as per keys in Flora of China, as the fruits appear to be tuberculate.


I think you are right. The tuberculate capsules are indicative of Alchornea tiliifolia (Benth.) Müll.Arg.
There is an interesting post from 2016 in the archives which appears to be of Alchornea mollis (Benth.) Müll.Arg. Here is the link: efi thread


Welcome. I am aware of all the 3 species of Alchornea in India. The dividing lines between A. mollis and A. tiliifolia are narrow. So, one needs to see the undersurface of the leaves for a conclusive decision. The present images are not showing the lower surface clearly. We are unable to know about the foliar glands and the nature of pubescence. Till then, the identity will remain doubtful.


What do you think based on fruit character?


Well, here the fruits are subglobose and smooth, not tuberculate, unlike Alchornea tiliifolia.



Attaching a cropped version of the second photograph in this thread. After Garg ji’s observation, I zoomed into the image and was able to discern several protuberances on the surface of some of the capsules. Would these qualify as tubercles?


Flora of China says “Capsule subglobose, ca. 10 mm in diam., tomentulose” for Alchornea mollis Bentham ex Müller Argoviensis and 
Capsule ellipsoid, 6-8 mm in diam., puberulent, tubercled for Alchornea tiliifolia (Bentham) Müller Argoviensis

I think it is Alchornea tiliifolia (Bentham) Müller Argoviensis only.


Please go ahead with A. tiliifolia.



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References: Catalogue of Life  The Plant List Ver.1.1  WCSP  IPNI POWO  BSI Flora of India  Flora of China  FOC illustration  India Biodiversity Portal  Useful Tropical Plants  asianplant  Bhutan Biodiversity Portal

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