Artocarpus gomezianus Wallich ex Trecul subsp
Common names
Kannada: Vate huli.
Malayalam: Chima, Thittipilavu.
Telugu: Nakkarenu.
English: Monkey jack.
Description: Large deciduous trees, up to 25 m tall; young shoots densely tomentose. Leaves alternate, ovate, ovate-lanceolate or oblong, up to 25 x 12 cm, truncate or subcordate at base, acuminate at apex; grey-pubescent beneath; stipules small, grey-pubescent. Flowers monoecious, in axillary, globose, shortly pedunculate heads. The fruit is a syncarp, exhibiting a smooth, fleshy texture and irregular lobes. The seeds are oblong in shape.
Flowering : January – April.
Distribution: India: Found in evergreen and semi-evergreen forests. South West India. Sometimes cultivated.
Sri Lanka.
Uses: The sour fruit is dried and used as a substitute for tamarind in curries. Wood used for construction work, furniture and for boat building. Wood and fruits yield a yellow dye. Fruit and bark are used in lack of appetite, eye diseases and as aphrodisiac.