It grows some 7-10m tall, and is found in relatively small and fragmented populations within secondary forest formations, and the flooded forests of
Tonle Sap and the Mekong.[3][4][6]
The wood is used to make charcoal, occasionally for temporary constructions. It is known as krâbau nhi, krâbau sva: and krâbau phlè tauch (="small fruit-krabau") in
Khmer.[3][7]
^Bosworth, Andrew; Napat Chaipraditkul; Ming Ming Cheng; Junmookda, Kimberly; Parag Kadam; Macer, Darryl; Millet, Charlotte; Sangaroonthong, Jennifer; Waller, Alexander (2011). Ethics and Biodiversity: Ethics and Climate Change in Asia and the Pacific (ECCAP) Project Working Group 16 Report. UNESCO Bangkok. p. 58.
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