TL;DR: Overall, high 32P absorption in the coconut-Grevillea plots indicates complementary root-level interactions between these species, and selection of tree species with low root competitiveness and/or trees with complementary root interaction is of strategic importance in agroforestry.
Abstract: The magnitude of root competition 17 year-old coconut palms suffer from three year-old inter-planted multipurpose trees, Vateria indica L., Ailanthus triphysa (Dennst.) Alston. or Grevillea robusta A. Cunn. and kacholam (Kaempferia galanga L.), a herbaceous medicinal plant, was evaluated based on the extent of absorption of applied 32P by the palms in sole and mixed crop situations. The multipurpose tree (MPT) species were grown under two planting geometries (single row and double row). The hypothesis that, when grown together, widespread root proliferation of coconut and multipurpose trees occurs in the well-fertilised kacholam beds was tested by root excavation. Interplanted MPTs substantially altered absorption of 32P by coconut. Both Ailanthus and Vateria exerted a modest depressing effect, while Grevillea enhanced 32P uptake by coconut. Single rows of MPTs also favoured 32P recovery by coconut, presumably because of the increased root densities in the subsoil. Ailanthus, Vateria and Grevillea absorbed substantial 32P. Overall, high 32P absorption in the coconut-Grevillea plots indicates complementary root-level interactions between these species. 32P absorption by MPTs was generally higher closer to the trees owing to the greater root concentration of the MPTs, which in turn suggests possible root interference between MPTs and coconut. Hence selection of tree species with low root competitiveness and/or trees with complementary root interaction is of strategic importance in agroforestry. Kacholam showed substantial 32P content in its foliage. This 32P appears to have been translocated by coconut into the kacholam beds where new coconut roots were abundant.
TL;DR: Extractives of 11 species belonging to the genera Cotylelobium, Hopea, Shorea, Vateria and Vatica yielded a fatty acid ester, a sitosteryl ester and β-amyrin acetate as mentioned in this paper.
TL;DR: Samples of the tree barks of Vatica umbonata Burck, a relatively large genus belonging to the family Dipterocarpaceae, are collected from the Experimental Garden of Kaliurang, Yogyakarta, Indonesia.
TL;DR: Sri Lankan Dipterocarpaceae evolved independently after Sri Lanka became geographically isolated from the Indo- Malaysian region, and their relationship with other Asian members of the family is still unknown.
Abstract: The Dipterocarpaceae, a well-known tropical tree family of Asian rainforests, is the most dominant component of Sri Lankan rainforests. The origin of Sri Lankan Dipterocarpaceae and their relationship with other Asian members of the family are still unknown. We studied this relationship using chloroplast DNA nucleotide sequences. DNA sequences of trnL-trnF spacer and trnL intron regions from 27 Sri Lankan species, and 62 other species belonging to 14 genera were included in the study. The neighbor joining (NJ) tree was constructed using aligned sequences of both regions. Monotes madagascariensis was used as an out-group. The obtained result is, to a certain extent, consistent with the current morphology based on taxonomy of Dipterocarpaceae. The Sri Lankan endemic genus Stemonoporus formed a monophyletic clade. The other Sri Lankan species of Hopea, Dipterocarpus, Vatica, Cotylelobium, Vateria and most of Shorea formed separate groups on the phylogenetic tree. This may indicate that Sri Lankan Dipterocarpaceae evolved independently after Sri Lanka became geographically isolated from the Indo- Malaysian region.
TL;DR: The aglycone results do not completely agree with the existing classifications, and suggests the need for a revision of the species and sectional levels in the family Dipterocarpaceae in Sri Lanka.