514 
FOXWORTHY. 
Dipterocarpus tuberculatus Roxb. Eng, in (Bunn.). 
British India and Burma, Cochin China. 
R edclish-brown, heavy, but readily worked wood. Used for structural 
work. 
Pierre 218; Watt Diet. 3:160; Gamb. 72, tab. II, fig. 1; Nord. V (D. grandi- 
florus Wall.), XI. 
Dipterocarpus turbinatus Gaertn. f. (D. laevis Ilam.). Kanyin (Bunn.); 
gurjun (Beng.). 
British India and the Andaman Islands.' 
Eed, moderately hard wood; used for house and boat building. 
Watt Diet. 3:170; Gamb. 70. 
Dipterocarpus vernicifluus Blanco. Panao. 
Philippines. 
Phil. Woods 373. 
Dipterocarpus zeylanicus Thw. Hora. 
Ceylon. 
Gamb. 72. 
Doona congesti flora Thw. Tinya. 
Ceylon. 
Used for tea-boxes. 
Lewis 308. 
Doona gardneri Thw. 
Ceylon. 
Wood hard, even-grained, durable, reddish-brown; called “red doon” 
by sawyers in the hill country, and used for sleepers in the Haputale 
railway. 
Doona zeylanica Thw. Dun, doon. 
Ceylon. 
Wood light, moderately hard, pale-grayish-brown, durable and greatly 
in request for shingles, whence the tree is often called “shingle tree.” 
Gamb. 74. 
Dryobalanops aromatica Gaertn. f. Ivapor; kampferhout; Borneo camphor 
wood. 
Borneo, Sumatra, Malacca. 
Van Eed. 27; Ridl. 61; Newton 6. 
Dryobalanops beccarii Dyer. Kapor gunong and kapor paya (M.). 
Sarawak. 
Becc. 572; Bargagli-Petrucci 73. 
Dryobalanops kayanensis Becc. Kapor bennar. 
Sarawak. 
Becc. 572; Bargagli-Petrucci 74. 
Other species of Dryobalanops furnish wood which is not to be distinguished 
from that of the species mentioned. 
Hopea acuminata Merr. Plate XXVII, fig. 68. Mangachapuy or dalin- 
dingan. 
Philippines. 
Phil. Woods 389; Gard. 68. 
