Skip to main content
Costa Rica Tree Atlas logoTree AtlasCosta Rica
HomeTreesRegionsIdentifyCalendarCompareEducationGlossarySafetyAbout
/
Costa Rica Tree Atlas logoTree AtlasCosta Rica

© 2026 Costa Rica Tree Atlas. Code: AGPL-3.0 | Content: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 Made with ❤️ for Costa Rica's forests

? Keyboard shortcuts

  1. Home
  2. Trees
  3. Surá
CombretaceaeVU

Surá

Terminalia oblonga

12 min read
Also available in:Español
Surá

Native Region

Central and South America

Max Height

40-50 meters

Family

Combretaceae

Conservation

VU

Uses

Premium construction timberMarine and dock pilingsRailroad tiesHeavy constructionFlooringFurniture

Season

Flowering

Mar-May

Fruiting

Jun-Aug

Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
FlowersFruits

🛡️Safety Information

Toxicity Level
🟢None
Allergen Risk
🔵Low
Structural Hazards
Falling Branchesbuttress roots
✅
Child Safe
Yes
✅
Pet Safe
Yes

Toxicity Details

Surá is non-toxic. The tree poses no ingestion hazards to humans or animals. Fruits are eaten by wildlife safely. No toxic compounds documented in leaves, bark, or wood.

Skin Contact Risks

No skin irritation from handling bark, leaves, or wood.

Allergenic Properties

LOW allergen risk. Wood dust during sawing/sanding may cause respiratory irritation in sensitive individuals (common with hardwoods). Use dust mask when working with timber.

Structural Hazards

As a massive emergent tree (40-50m tall), Surá has large buttress roots that can extend several meters from the trunk and cause damage to structures. The tree is too large for residential settings. Heavy branches can cause significant damage when falling. This is a tree for forest preservation, not urban or suburban planting.

Wildlife & Pet Risks

Safe for all animals. Provides habitat and food for canopy wildlife.

Surá

⚠️A Rainforest Giant Under Pressure

Surá (Terminalia oblonga) is one of Costa Rica's most impressive rainforest trees—a true emergent giant that towers above the main canopy on massive buttressed roots. This tree produces some of the finest construction timber in the Neotropics, comparable to teak in durability and workability. Unfortunately, this very quality has made Surá a target for intensive logging, and large specimens are increasingly rare outside protected areas. Understanding and protecting this magnificent species is essential for maintaining both forest ecosystems and sustainable forestry options for the future.

Quick Reference

🌿

iNaturalist Observations

Community-powered species data

290+

Observations

186

Observers

View Species Page ↗Browse Photos ↗🇨🇷 Costa Rica Only ↗

📸 Photo Gallery

Photos sourced from the iNaturalist citizen science database. View all observations →↗


Taxonomy and Classification

Plantae
Angiosperms
Eudicots
Myrtales
Combretaceae
Terminalia
T. oblonga
ℹ️Name Origins
  • Terminalia: Latin "terminalis" - leaves clustered at branch tips - oblonga: Latin for "oblong" - leaf shape - The genus includes ~200 species worldwide, many valued for timber - Famous relatives include Indian Almond (T. catappa) and African Terminalia

Common Names

Related Species in Costa Rica


Physical Description

Overall Form

Surá is a massive emergent tree that towers above the surrounding canopy. It's characterized by its impressive buttressed trunk, straight cylindrical bole, and spreading crown that emerges into full sunlight. Mature trees are true forest giants, visible from great distances.

Mature Height/100
Canopy Spread/100
Trunk Diameter/100
Buttress Height/100

Identifying Features

The Buttresses

  • Form: Plank buttresses, thick and spreading
  • Height: Up to 3-5 meters
  • Spread: Extending 2-4 m from trunk
  • Function: Structural support
  • Surface: Smooth to slightly fissured
  • Diagnostic: Key identification feature

Bark

  • Color: Gray-brown to dark brown
  • Texture: Fissured, becoming scaly with age
  • Thickness: Relatively thick
  • Inner bark: Pinkish to reddish

Leaves

  • Arrangement: Clustered at branch tips (terminal)
  • Shape: Oblong to elliptic
  • Size: 8-18 cm long
  • Margin: Entire
  • Texture: Leathery
  • Color: Dark green above, paler below
  • Glands: Often with glands on petiole

Flowers and Fruit

  • Flowers: Small, greenish-white, in spikes
  • Flowering: Early rainy season
  • Fruit: Winged samara, 2-3 cm
  • Seeds: Single seed per fruit
  • Dispersal: Wind
💡Terminalia Pattern: Terminal Leaves

The genus name Terminalia refers to the distinctive leaf arrangement where leaves cluster at the ends (termini) of branches: Looking for Terminalia: - Branches have bare sections - Leaves bunch at the tips - Creates distinctive "bottlebrush" pattern - Visible even from below Combined with the massive buttresses, this makes Surá identifiable even among other rainforest giants!


Distribution and Habitat

Global Distribution

🗺️

Geographic Distribution

Distribution in Costa Rica

Habitat Preferences


    Ecological Role

    Forest Giant Functions

    Canopy Architecture

    • Emergent status: Extends above main canopy
    • Light capture: Accesses full sunlight
    • Rain interception: Influences local hydrology
    • Wind protection: Shelters understory
    • Microclimate creation: Shaded zones below

    Wildlife Habitat

    • Cavity nesting: Large branches host cavities
    • Epiphyte support: Bark hosts orchids, bromeliads
    • Seed dispersal: Wind-dispersed, also eaten by some birds
    • Perching: Large branches for raptors
    • Frugivore feeding: Seeds attract some wildlife
    ℹ️Buttresses: Engineering Marvels

    The massive buttresses of Surá serve multiple functions: Structural Support: - Distribute weight on shallow tropical soils - Resist wind throw in storms - Anchor the tall trunk Nutrient Capture: - Large surface area catches leaf litter - Creates nutrient-rich pockets - Supports specialized root growth Habitat Creation: - Cavities between buttresses shelter animals - Collect water in wet season - Hide small mammals and amphibians Buttresses are a characteristic adaptation of tropical rainforest giants to shallow, nutrient-poor soils!


    Timber: The Prize and the Peril

    Wood Properties

    🪵

    Premium Neotropical Hardwood

    Surá wood is considered among the finest construction timbers in Central America: Physical Properties: - Density: 0.55-0.70 g/cm³ (moderate to heavy) - Grain: Straight to interlocked - Texture: Medium to fine - Color: Yellowish-brown heartwood - Sapwood: Paler, clearly distinct Working Qualities: - Excellent workability - Takes finishes well - Good nail/screw holding - Machines smoothly - Moderate drying difficulty Durability: - Naturally resistant to decay - Resistant to termites - Good ground contact performance - Long service life

    Traditional and Modern Uses

    ⚠️The Cost of Quality

    Surá's excellent timber properties have been its undoing: Historical Logging Pressure: - One of the most sought-after species - Systematically targeted for decades - Large trees increasingly rare - Regeneration insufficient to replace harvest Current Status: - Vulnerable on IUCN Red List - Large specimens mostly in protected areas - Plantation interest growing - Need for sustainable management Conservation Need: - Protect remaining wild populations - Establish seed collection programs - Develop plantation systems

    • Enforce harvest regulations

    Conservation Status

    Threats

    Primary Threats

    • Overexploitation: Decades of selective logging
    • Habitat loss: Deforestation for agriculture
    • Fragmentation: Isolated populations
    • Slow regeneration: Long time to maturity
    • Illegal logging: Continues despite regulations

    Contributing Factors

    • High timber value creates pressure
    • Large size makes trees conspicuous
    • Lowland habitat heavily developed
    • Enforcement challenging in remote areas
    • Limited plantation establishment

    Conservation Efforts


    Cultivation

    Growing Surá


    Identification Guide

    How to Identify Surá


    Where to See Surá in Costa Rica

    💡Finding Surá

    Surá is increasingly difficult to find outside protected areas: Where to Look: - Primary lowland rainforest - Caribbean and southern Pacific slopes - Protected areas and reserves - Remote forest areas Identification Tips: - Look for massive buttressed trunks - Trees tower above surrounding canopy - Often with epiphyte-covered branches - Terminal leaf clustering visible Best Time: - Year-round (evergreen) - Fruiting: Late dry to early wet season Consider visiting La Selva or similar research stations where large Surá specimens are protected and accessible.


    The Future of Surá

    ℹ️A Timber Tree's Crossroads

    Surá embodies the challenge of tropical forest conservation: The Dilemma:

    • Exceptional timber quality creates demand - Long growth time limits sustainable harvest - Wild populations depleted by past logging - Plantation forestry not yet widespread Paths Forward: 1. Strict protection of remaining populations 2. Plantation development for future timber needs 3. Selective harvest with long rotations 4. Market incentives for certified sustainable sources 5. Research into faster growth methods Hope: - Species is resilient if given protection - Interest in plantation forestry growing - Value could drive conservation investment - Genetic resources still available Surá can have a future as both a wild rainforest giant and a plantation crop—but only with deliberate conservation effort.

    External Resources

    🔗
    iNaturalist: Terminalia oblonga↗

    Community observations and photos

    🔗
    IUCN Red List↗

    Conservation status assessment

    🔗
    Tropical Timber Database↗

    Wood properties information


    References

    📚 Scientific References & Further Reading

    CITES (2023). Terminalia species trade and conservation. Convention on International Trade

    Chazdon, R.L. (2014). Second Growth: The Promise of Tropical Forest Regeneration. University of Chicago Press

    Holdridge, L.R. & Poveda, L.J. (1975). Árboles de Costa Rica Vol. 1. Centro Científico Tropical


    ✅Giant of the Green Cathedral

    Standing at the base of a mature Surá, neck craned upward, you feel what "rainforest giant" truly means. The massive buttresses spread around you like the roots of some ancient temple, their smooth gray surfaces rising meters above your head before merging into a trunk that climbs straight and true toward the distant canopy. Far above, the crown bursts into sunlight that the forest floor will never see, catching the trade winds that carry its winged seeds across the lowland forests. This single tree has stood perhaps for centuries, weathering storms, sequestering carbon, and supporting an invisible ecosystem of epiphytes, insects, and vertebrates in its branches. It's a cathedral column in the green church of the rainforest—and like the old-growth forests of other continents, it's becoming rare. The same qualities that make Surá magnificent—its size, its durability, its straight strong wood—have made it a target. Protecting the remaining giants while developing sustainable alternatives is one of the key challenges of tropical forestry. When you see a Surá standing proud in a protected reserve, you're seeing both a survivor and a seed bank for the future.

    Safety Information Disclaimer

    Safety information is provided for educational purposes only. Individual reactions may vary significantly based on age, health status, amount of exposure, and individual sensitivity. Always supervise children around plants. Consult a medical professional or certified arborist for specific concerns. The Costa Rica Tree Atlas is not liable for injuries or damages resulting from interaction with trees described in this guide.

    • Always supervise children around plants

    • Consult medical professional if unsure

    • Seek immediate medical attention if poisoning occurs

    Information compiled from authoritative toxicology sources, scientific literature, and medical case reports.

    Related Trees

    Amarillón
    Same family

    Amarillón

    Terminalia amazonia

    Cachimbo

    Cachimbo

    Couratari guianensis

    Espavel

    Espavel

    Anacardium excelsum

    Pilón

    Pilón

    Hyeronima alchorneoides

    Distribution in Costa Rica

    GuanacasteAlajuelaHerediaSan JoséCartagoLimónPuntarenasNicaraguaPanamaPacific OceanCaribbean Sea

    Legend

    Present
    Not recorded

    Elevation

    0-700m

    Regions

    • Limón
    • Alajuela
    • Heredia
    • Puntarenas