Author: Prain.
Morphological description (caudata Crudia infl 386541 )
Tree  25 m high. Stipules  more or less intrapetiolar, triangular to lanceolate, up to 7(-13) mm long.
Leaves  (4-)6-8-foliolate, shortly petioled; petiole  and rachis  up to 10 cm long, ending in a subulate tip (up to 10 mm long), rusty tomentose; petiolules  very short, 1-2 mm, pubescent. Leaflets  chartaceous or subcoriaceous, elliptic-oblong or obovate-oblong, 7-9(-15) by 2-3(-4) cm; apex acuminate or caudate; base obtuse, rounded, or cuneate, symmetric; glossy, glabrous above, rusty pubescent (often dense on the midrib) beneath; nerves 5-8 per side.
Inflorescences  racemose, axillary or terminal, usually erect, up to c. 15 cm long, the rachis rusty tomentose, rather densely flowered; bracts  ovate to lanceolate, sometimes oblanceolate, (5-)7-9 mm long, pubescent outside and glabrous inside, some of them 3-lobed and the central lobe imparipinnately relobed; bracteoles  lanceolate or spoon-shaped, 6-9 mm long, almost enclosing the bud; pedicels  10-15 mm, pubescent, articulated at the apex (caudata Crudia inflpp 386541 ).
Flowers  pubescent outside. Hypanthium  2-2.5 mm long. Calyx  lobes 4 (sometimes with 1 or 2 additional, smaller, glabrous ones), ovate, unequally sized, 5-7 by 3.5-5 mm, glabrous inside. Stamens  10, or rarely 9; filaments unequal in length, up to c. 15 mm; anthers 0.75 mm long. Pistil  shortly stipitate; stipe c. 2 mm long, free, glabrous; ovary c. 3 mm long, (4-)6-ovuled; style 8-17 mm, glabrous or slightly hairy at the basal part; stigma slightly thicker than the style.
Pods  (unripe) elliptic, ovate-oblong, or obovate, 7-10 by 2.5-3.5 cm, flat, cuneate at both ends, rusty, velvety, valves thinly leathery, usually 1-seeded (caudata Crudia pod/lvs 386540 ).
Seeds  shortly oblong, broadly elliptic, or rounded, flat, 3-4 by 2-3 cm.
Distribution
Thailand (Peninsula, once collected); in Malesia:  Malaya (Trengganu, Johore), Borneo (Sarawak, W Kalimantan).
Habitat & Ecology
In forest on river banks, and freshwater swampy areas, level land or a few m altitude Fr. June, July.
Notes
1. The plants which were in the past cultivated in the Botanic Garden of Bogor, Java, have died.
2. Specimens of this species can be easily distinguished from others in this genus by the caudate leaf apex, as alluded by the specific epithet, and (densely) rusty tomentose young branchlets, leaf under surface (especially on the midrib), leaf rachises and inflorescences.
3. The ovary is not 1-ovuled (cf. J.E. Vidal 1984, p. 92); it is actually (4-)6-ovuled.