Terminalia pendula is an Asian species of tree in the family Combretaceae. It is a medium-sized tree found in both primary and secondary tropical and sub-tropical forests. It is recorded from India to China, south to Thailand and Vietnam. It may be one of the dominant species of seasonal tropical forests of Vietnam. In Yunnan it is found in rocky limestone areas, near sea level to . Besides timber uses, the bark of this species has a high tannin content.
A 2017 article embedded genera including Anogeissus into Terminalia; there are now three varieties of this species:
In China, where it is known as æ¦Â绿æÂ¨ (yu lü mu), these trees grow to tall with a trunk to in diameter at breast height. In Myanmar they may be larger: up to tall and up to girth, with a straight and cylindrical trunk. The branchlets are slightly pendent, slender, together with petioles and leaf blades golden when young. The petioles are cylindrical, 2âÂÂ6 mm and the leaf blades are lanceolate to narrowly so, 40-80 à10âÂÂ30 mm long, grey-green on the back and pilose mostly in the axils of lateral veins. They are green and glabrous to glabrescent on the leaf surface. The leaf base is narrowed or obtuse, the apex acuminate. There are five to seven inconspicuous lateral veins in pairs.
The flowers are numerous sessile on flower heads 9âÂÂ13 mm in diameter; bracts are easily deciduous and linear, 4âÂÂ5 mm long. The calyx tubes are approximately 5 mm long, abaxially yellow pubescent, densely so on ovary and tubular part, and more sparsely so on the cup-shaped part. The filaments are 3âÂÂ4 mm long. The fruits are approximately 6 à5 mm long including a "beak". They are ferruginous pubescent distally and on the beak.
Terminalia pendula flowers between February and March in Bangladesh and Thailand.