Plantae > Tracheophyta > Magnoliopsida > Santalales > Santalaceae > Santalum

Santalum (sandalwood)

Synonyms: Eucarya; Fusanus; Sirium

Wikipedia Abstract

Santalum is a genus of woody flowering plants, the best known and commercially valuable of which is the Indian sandalwood tree, S. album. Members of the genus are trees or shrubs. Most are root parasites which photosynthesize their own food, but tap the roots of other species for water and inorganic nutrients. Several species, most notably S. album, produce highly aromatic wood, used for scents and perfumes and for herbal medicine. About 25 known species range across the Indomalaya, Australasia, and Oceania ecozones, from India through Malesia to the Pacific Islands, as far as Hawaiʻi and the Juan Fernández Islands off the coast of South America.
View Wikipedia Record: Santalum

Species

Santalum acuminatum (desert quandong)
Santalum album (sandalwood) (Vulnerable) (Attributes)
Santalum americanum
Santalum austrocaledonicum (New Caldedonia Sandalwood)
Santalum boninense
Santalum ellipticum (coastal sandalwood) (Attributes)
Santalum fernandezianum (Extinct)
Santalum freycinetianum (forest sandalwood) (Endangered) (Attributes)
Santalum haleakalae (Haleakala sandalwood) (Attributes)
Santalum haleakale <Unverified Name>
Santalum insulare (Rapan Sandalwood) (Endangered)
Santalum lanceolatum
Santalum macgregorii (Critically Endangered)
Santalum murrayanum (Bitter Quandong)
Santalum novaecaesareae
Santalum obtusifolium (Sandalwood)
Santalum paniculatum (mountain sandalwood) (Vulnerable) (Attributes)
Santalum papuanum
Santalum spicatum (Australian sandalwood) (Vulnerable)
Santalum yasi (Endangered)

External References

Species taxanomy provided by GBIF Secretariat (2022). GBIF Backbone Taxonomy. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/39omei accessed via GBIF.org on 2023-06-13; License: CC BY 4.0