Calophyllum brasiliense

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Local names:
English (false mamery,Brazil beauty-leaf), Portuguese (guanande), Spanish (santa maría,palo de maría,ocuje colorado,leche de maría,lagargo caspi,calaba,bari,alfaro,aceite maría), Trade name (santa maria,jacareuba)

Calophyllum brasiliense is a medium-sized, evergreen tree 12-20 m tall and 0.5 m or more in diameter, with a dense crown. Under favorable conditions the tree grows 30-45 m tall with long, straight clear trunk 1-1.8 m in diameter and no buttresses. The dense crown, abundant white flowers, brown fruits, and whitish latex can recognize María. The bark is light grey and smooth or slightly fissured, with numerous protuberances on large trunks; inner bark whitish and bitter.

Twigs green, 4-angled, minutely hairy when young, becoming grey. The leaves are opposite, stiff, elliptic, 6.3-12.5 cm long and 3.2-6.3 cm wide, dark green and shiny on the upper surface, with many straight parallel lateral veins at nearly right angles with the midrib. Petioles are 0.6-1.9 cm long, blades rounded or minutely notched at the apex, short pointed at the base, slightly leathery.

Flowers are numerous, small fragrant, white 1-1.3 cm wide in lateral branched racemes 2.5-5 cm long, male and bisexual on the same tree. There are 4 white rounded and concave sepals, 2 about 0.6 cm long and 2 about half as long, widely spreading and turned back. Petals commonly absent or 1-4, smaller than the largest sepals, white; male flowers with 4-50 stamens in a prominent orange cluster more than 0.6 cm across and often a rudimentary pistil. Sexual flowers with 8-12 stamens and pistils consisting of a round, green ovary 0.3 inches in diameter, one-celled with one ovule, short bent style and flattened whitish stigma.

The fruit is a 1-seeded brown drupe 2.5 cm in diameter.

The generic name comes from the Greek words ‘kalos’-beautiful and ‘phullon’-leaf, meaning beautiful-leafed and the specific epithet means 'of Brazil'.

Ecology

María is widely distributed throughout the West Indies. In Puerto Rico, it grows in the sub-tropical moist forest with ucas (Budica buceras), roble blanco(Tabebuia heterophylla), algarrobo (Hymenea courbaril) etc. In Nicaragua, the species is found in lowland evergreen rain forest with Andira inermis, Carapa nicaraguensis, Dialium guianense etc. In the lower montane rain forests of the Chiapas, Mexico, maría is one of the canopy trees.

Native range
Bolivia, Brazil, Costa Rica, Cuba, Guyana, Jamaica, Mexico, Nicaragua, Peru, Puerto Rico

Tree management

Close spacings of 1.8 x 1.8 m or 1.5x 1.5 m are used to speed crown closures and prevent lateral branching. Weeding may not be necessary in dry areas. In wet areas, circular weeding 1 m around the tree should be done at least annually. Thinnings should be done more timely before the trees have been suppressed for so many years.

In Puerto Rico, seeds store for 1 year in a dry room germinated fairly well. Fruits should not be stored at a temperature below 0 deg C., and the water content of the fruit should not be lower than 35%.

María is widely distributed throughout the West Indies. In Puerto Rico, it grows in the sub-tropical moist forest with ucas (Budica buceras), roble blanco(Tabebuia heterophylla), algarrobo (Hymenea courbaril) etc. In Nicaragua, the species is found in lowland evergreen rain forest with Andira inermis, Carapa nicaraguensis, Dialium guianense etc. In the lower montane rain forests of the Chiapas, Mexico, maría is one of the canopy trees.

Average germination is about 70%. Fresh seeds are sown directly into the soil. Seeds can be broadcast, if conditions are suitable, but plantations are usually established by planting seeds at a depth of 2.5 cm within 6 weeks if the endocarp is removed; seed with endocarp, which inhibits water uptake, may be broken with a hammer. Planting seedlings has been successful when the seedlings are moved with a ball of earth, and the best results have been observed in the rainy season. María only coppices when it is very young and it does not produce root suckers. Neither root nor shoot cuttings of maría have been successfully used for propagation.

The fruits are good food for hogs.

Timber:  The heartwood is pink or yellowish pink to brick red or rich reddish brown. Sapwood is lighter in color but not always clearly differentiated from the heartwood. The wood is rather difficult to air-season, and drying rate varies substantially. The wood is rather easy to work and usually yields smooth surface if straight grained but usually tears and chips if the grain is interlocked. It is below average in planing, turning and boring. The attractive wood is similar to mahogany (Swietenia macrophylla) and has comparable uses.

Shade or shelter:  In West Indies, maría is planted as a shade tree for coffee and cacao and for windbreaks.

Lipids:  oil has been extracted from the seeds.

Medicine:  The resin called balsámo de maría, has been used medicinally.

Ornamental: Its evergreen habit makes it suitable for use in ornamental and shade tree plantings.

Soil improver:  It has been used to stabilize soils and to relieve soil compaction in degraded pastures.