Cordia alliodora

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Related Links
C. alliodora, self pruning of naturally regenerated trees over cacao, San Francisco, Honduras.
© David Boshier
C. alliodora, a wet zone population in a 14 year old provenance trial at Tumaco, Colombia.
© David Boshier
C. alliodora, mature seed after cleaning.
© David Boshier
C. alliodora, mature embryo.
© David Boshier
C. alliodora, tree in flower, Turrialba, Costa Rica.
© David Boshier
Flower: Flower with wilted stigma.
© David Boshier

Local names:
Creole (bwa soumi), Creole Patois (chene caparo), English (laurel,Spanish elm,spruce,salmwood,smoke wood,brown silver balli,corallilo,cordia,cyp,cypress,Ecuador laurel), French (bois de roge,chêne noir,bojon,chêne caparo,bois de rose,bois de Rhodes,bois

Cordia alliodora grows to over 40 m. Bole generally straight, cylindrical; often clear of branches for up to 50-60% of the total tree height. May or may not be buttressed; on shallow soils, buttresses may extend 1-1.5 m up the trunk. On good sites, C. alliodora typically achieves a diameter at breast height of 30-50 cm, although it may exceed 1 m. Bark smooth; greenish colour when young, greenish-black, smooth or narrowly fissured when mature. The thin, tough, pale underbark darkens rapidly on exposure to light. Some trees have pronounced nodal swellings where the branches have been shed. 

Leaves simple, alternate, up to 5 cm wide and 18 cm long, pointed at the base. Upper leaf surface may have scattered hairs when young but becomes smooth when mature; lower surface covered with stellate hairs. Petioles 1-2 cm long; slender and sparsely haired, like the greenish twigs.

Flowers hermaphroditic, unspecialized, about 1 cm in length; occur in a large, auxiliary terminal inflorescence with flowers as few as 50 up to as many as 3000.

The generic name honours a 16th century German botanist, Valerius Cordus. The species is named ‘alliodora’ because of the garlic odour that the leaves emit when they are crushed.

Ecology

C. alliodora is a pioneer plant found in a wide range of habitats. The tree is common in drier areas. It will tolerate a mean annual rainfall as low as 750 mm, but under these conditions growth is slower and the form of the stem crown poorer; optimal growth occurs where mean annual rainfall exceeds 2000 mm. C. alliodora is a strong, light-demanding species that readily colonizes exposed fertile soil. Very site sensitive with regard to soil conditions. Not only does it prefer soils free from seasonal waterlogging, it is also very demanding of nutrients.

Native range
Antigua and Barbuda, Argentina, Barbados, Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Grenada, Guadeloupe, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Martinique, Mexico, Netherlands Antilles, Nicaragua, Panama, Puerto Rico, St Kitts and Nevis, St Lucia, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Trinidad and Tobago, Venezuela, Virgin Islands (US)

Tree management

Line planting at 2.5 x 10 m and subsequent removal of the overstorey canopy is satisfactory for natural forest. Secondary and disturbed forests require earlier capture of the site to avoid prolonged intensive weeding operations. This could be facilitated by reducing the distance between the lines to 5 m. The species’ simple nursery requirements and the ease with which plantations can be raised from seedlings, stumps, or even direct sowing are important factors that greatly facilitate plantation management. Even when grown as a solitary tree in the open, C. alliodora maintains a single, persistent stem and narrow crown, and prunes itself to about two-thirds of its total height. It coppices well.

The time to collect seed of maximum viability is indicated when the flower panicles turning from yellow to brown without appearing burnt, the colour being that of the persistent corolla.

Germination percentage reaches 80% or more. Whole seed 11-40% mc. Orthodox seed storage behaviour; seed viability is halved after 12 months storage at 5 deg. C with 12-18% mc; 50% germination after 1 year storage at 5 deg. C with between 10-25% mc; viability is reduced from 63% to 31% after 1 year storage at room temperature with 11.5% mc; seeds tolerate desiccation to 6.9% mc, viability is maintained at 2-5 deg. C with 6.9% mc. Seed dried below 10% mc, and stored at 2 deg. C shows little deterioration over 10 years. There are 55 000-75 000 viable seed/kg.

C. alliodora is a pioneer plant found in a wide range of habitats. The tree is common in drier areas. It will tolerate a mean annual rainfall as low as 750 mm, but under these conditions growth is slower and the form of the stem crown poorer; optimal growth occurs where mean annual rainfall exceeds 2000 mm. C. alliodora is a strong, light-demanding species that readily colonizes exposed fertile soil. Very site sensitive with regard to soil conditions. Not only does it prefer soils free from seasonal waterlogging, it is also very demanding of nutrients.

Timing of seed collection is important to ensure a high germination rate, up to 80%. The seed germinates rapidly and is suitable for broadcast sowing, or seedlings can be raised in germination beds. A single tree can yield up to 8 kg of seed, but the usual yield is 0.5 to 3 kg. Bare-root planting is rare; potted stock is occasionally used. Stumps (produced by pruning the roots and shoots back to short lengths) are the most widely used planting stock because of their robust qualities and the ease and economy with which they can be produced.

  The fruits are edible but not very tasty.

Apiculture:  Flowers are a major source of viscous, extra-white honey.

Timber:  A renowned timber-producing species. The wood is usually straight grained, easy to work to a smooth finish, with little dulling of cutting edges. The wood is used for building construction, flooring, furniture and veneer manufacture, boat timbers, oars, rail sleepers, turnery, scientific equipment, and a wide variety of carvings and artists’ equipment. The wood is resistant to decay; it has some resistance to marine borers and is outstandingly resistant to termite attack.

Shade or shelter:  Grown as a shade tree for coffee and cocoa plantations and in pastures, often in combination with Erythrina poeppigiana. Plantations exposed to hurricanes and cyclones have shown above-average resistance to stem break and wind throw.

Medicine:  A decoction of the leaves is used as a tonic and a stimulant, especially in cases of catarrh and lung infection. Pulverized seeds are used in the treatment of cutaneous diseases.

Ornamental:  The tree is planted as an ornamental because of its attractive, abundant, white, fragrant flowers. 

Soil improver:  Improved nutrient recycling is brought about by growing C. alliodora in coffee plantations.

Intercropping:  Good tree for combining with crops. It has been incorporated with pasture, often in mixture with woody species of Erythrina. It has also been grown with sugarcane.