Buchanania arborescens near Cairns, QueenslandBuchanania axillaris in Bangalore, IndiaBuchanania mangoides
Buchanania is a genus of plants in the mango and cashew family Anacardiaceae, native to areas from India to southern China, and southwards to northern Australia and the western Pacific.[1][2]
This genus consists of trees with simple, unlobed leaves arranged alternately on the twigs. Flowers are produced in axillary or terminal panicles. Flowers are bisexual, i.e. they have both male and female organs. They usually have 5 calyx lobes and 5 petals, sometimes 4 or 6, and are pale green to white. There are 10 stamens and 4–6 carpels, only one of which is fertile. Fruits are more or less lens-shaped drupes with a bony or woody endocarp, and contain a single seed.[3][4] Unlike other genera in the family, Buchanania does not appear to cause contact dermatitis.[5]: 195
The genus is native to areas from South and Southeast Asia, extending to northern Australia and the western Pacific. The full distribution is as follows:[1][2]
Indian subcontinent: Assam, Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Sri Lanka, West Himalaya
China & East Asia: China South-Central, Hainan, Taiwan,
^Pell, S. K.; Mitchell, J. D.; Miller, A. J.; Lobova, T. A. (2010). "Anacardiaceae". The Families and Genera of Vascular Plants. Vol. 10 Flowering Plants. Sapindales, Cucurbitales, Myrtaceae. Berlin: Springer. pp. 7–50. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-14397-7_3. ISBN978-3-642-14396-0.
^Sprengel, Kurt Polycarp Joachim (1801). "Buchanania Lanzan eine neue Gattung". Journal für die Botanik (in German and Latin). 1800 (2): 234. Retrieved 28 January 2025.