Local names:
English (bastard mahogany,crabwood,carapa), French (cabirma de Guinea,bois rouge,carapa,andiroba), Spanish (andiroba,caobilla,najesi,cedro macho,masábalo,cabrima de guiana), Trade name (bastard mahogany,crabwood,andiroba)
Carapa guianensis is a deciduous or semi-evergreen, monoecious, medium-sized to large trees up to 35 (max. 55) m tall; bole straight and cylindrical; branchless up to 20 (max. 30) m; up to 100 (max. 200) cm in diameter, sometimes fluted, with short buttresses up to 2 m high. Bark surface flaking into squarish scales or in horizontal strips, light grey to greyish brown or dark brown, sometimes reddish; inner bark fibrous, red or pinkish brown. Young plants produce taproots but the trees tend to become surface rooted. Leaves alternate, paripinnate with a dormant glandular leaflet at the apex, exstipulate; leaflets opposite, entire. Shows gigantic leaves in the monocaulous juvenile stage, decreasing in size when branching is initiated. Flowers small, white, borne in a large, axillary or subterminal thyrse; unisexual but with well-developed vestiges of the opposite sex; tetramerous to pentamerous (max. sextamerous); calyx lobed almost to the base; petals slightly contorted. Fruit dehiscent, 4-lobed, pendulous, subglobose, woody capsule containing 2-4 seeds in each lobe. Seeds smooth, pale brown, angular, with woody sarcotesta.
Ecology
C. guianensis is a locally common element of the canopy or subcanopy layer of the South American evergreen to semi-evergreen rainforest. It sometimes occurs as a dominant tree or even in almost pure stands and is found predominantly along rivers and on periodically flooded or swampy locations but also on higher ground and low hills. In South America, foresters recognize 2 types of wood: ‘red’ or ‘hill crabwood’ and ‘white crabwood’. The former is said to be superior and is obtained from trees growing on higher land, whereas white crabwood is derived from trees in swampy locations. Distributed from Central America (Belize) and the Caribbean south to Amazonian Brazil.
Native range
Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, French Guiana, Guadeloupe, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, Panama, Peru, Puerto Rico, Surinam, Trinidad and Tobago, Venezuela
Tree management
In South America, C. guianensis showed a mean annual diameter increment of 1.6-2 m in 25-year-old plantations. A large tree may produce 750-4000 seeds/year, but seed production may be almost zero in unfavourable years. C. guianensis may be considered for cultivation on swampy soils, since in a trial in Indonesia it proved resistant to oxygen deficiency, and mortality was not observed until after 90 days. In swamp forest, trees reach felling size in 20-25 years; at higher elevations probably in 40-60 years. Carapa is moderately tolerant of shade, but full overhead light is required for fast growth. It coppices freely and is resistant to fire.
Seed storage behaviour is recalcitrant; 100% germination after 2 months, nothing after 3 months of open storage with 90% r.h., or 24-31 deg. C; no seeds survive following 7 months of storage in paper bags at 12 deg. C and 30% r.h., or 14 deg. C and 80% r.h., whereas viability is halved with fresh seeds sealed in polythene bags at these temperatures after 7 months; there is loss in viability on desiccation. There are 40-110 seeds/kg.
C. guianensis is a locally common element of the canopy or subcanopy layer of the South American evergreen to semi-evergreen rainforest. It sometimes occurs as a dominant tree or even in almost pure stands and is found predominantly along rivers and on periodically flooded or swampy locations but also on higher ground and low hills. In South America, foresters recognize 2 types of wood: ‘red’ or ‘hill crabwood’ and ‘white crabwood’. The former is said to be superior and is obtained from trees growing on higher land, whereas white crabwood is derived from trees in swampy locations. Distributed from Central America (Belize) and the Caribbean south to Amazonian Brazil.
Can be propagated by seed. When sown on the surface or shallowly in moist soil, all fresh seeds germinate. A lower rate may be due to seeds drying out, excessive watering or insect damage. Unscarified seeds complete germination in 19-21 days, while scarified seeds take 6-7 days. Large cuttings can be used when planted in swampy soil. Early growth in the nursery is moderately fast, and seedlings may attain 0.5 m in the 1st year. The roots of 1-year-old seedlings are pruned at about 15 cm while plant is still in the nursery bed; when new rootlets begin to develop, the plant is uprooted and planted out.
Poison: Seed oil has insecticidal properties.
Fibre: The wood is suitable for the production of pulp and paper.
Timber: C. guianensis yields a medium-weight hardwood with a density of 580-750 kg/cubic m at 12% mc. Heartwood pale pink to red-brown when fresh, darkening to a medium reddish-brown to greyish sapwood; grain generally straight, sometimes interlocked; texture fine to coarse. Seasoning must be done carefully to avoid warping and checking. The timber is moderately soft to moderately hard, strong and moderately tough. Good working properties with a moderate dulling effect on tools and a slight tendency to split on nailing; glues well and polishes satisfactorily. Heartwood is moderately durable and resistant to termites. Its main attraction is for high-quality furniture and cabinetwork, stairs and flooring, and as veneer for furniture, interior work and plywood. It is used for masts, building material and as a substitute for okoumé (Aucoumea klineana) and walnut (Juglans regia). In Colombia, shoemakers prefer it for making shoe pieces.
Tannin or dyestuff: The bark is used for tanning.
Lipids: Oil obtained from the seeds, called ‘crab oil’ or ‘andiroba’, is well known and used as lamp oil and for making soap and candles.
Medicine: The bark contains an alkaloid, carapina, that is used as a febrifuge. Leaves boiled in water are applied to itchy skin; a fruit rind decoction is taken orally for fever and intestinal worms; a seed oil decoction is taken orally for hepatitis and tetanus and applied externally for skin diseases and ringworm.
Ornamental: Planted as an ornamental in the Caribbean, where it is locally naturalized.
Soil improver: C. guianensis is suitable for enrichment planting.