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Tourists continue to flock to the latest attraction in Phang Nga – a tree believed to be the country’s largest.
The 500-year-old tree, known as sapung in
 Thai (Tetrameles nudiflora), is more than 30 metres in circumference 
and above 50 metres in height.
It’s on Koh Yao Noi in the southern province’s Koh Yao district. 
The locale on the shore of Ao Khien Bay has several other large sapung trees, but none this big. 
 Ao Phang Nga National Park administrators have only recently begun 
promoting the site as a tourist attraction, seeking to get visitors 
involved in conserving the trees, which are accessible only by boat or 
after a trek through the woods. 
 Tetrameles nudiflora – whose soft timber has been used to make 
matchsticks, canoes and ceiling boards – often grows to immense heights 
and widths. 
Famous specimens wrap around the Ta Prohm temple ruins at Angkor in 
Cambodia and are admired in Vietnam’s Cat Tien National Park. 
The last time a Thai sapung tree made headlines was last August, when a 
40-metre-tall specimen was noticted in a cemetery in Tambon Chaiyapruk 
in Loei’s Mueang district.
Source - TheNation 
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