It is regarded as Near Threatened in status as the population is severely fragmented, there is a continuing decline of mature individuals and there is a continuing decline in the area, extent and/or quality of habitat. As noted below, it has critically endangered status in Bangladesh.
Descriptions, Habitats
It grows as an 8-20m tall tree in dense, semi-evergreen and evergreen forests of Cambodia.. In the Phnom Kulen National Park, Siem Reap Province, it is one of the dominant canopy and emergent tree taxa in the common Evergreen Forest formation. In Zhōngguó/China it occurs a tree some 5-9m tall, with a diameter at breast height of 30cm. It has rufous bark, though young branches are glabrous and pale brown. Leaves are 25 to 30cm. The fruit, c.5.5 by 3-3.5cm is brown and elliptic, 1 to 3 seeds. It flowers and fruits from November to January. The tree grows in evergreen broad-leaved forests at 1200-1800m elevation on limestone hills, particularly in Malipo County, Yunnan. The International Union for Conservation of Nature/IUCN has the plant as a rare scattered tree primarily found along rocky coasts in evergreen and primary forest. A. edulis trees have one of the largest diameter sizes in the Dryland Forest and Swamp Peat Forest formations in the Muara Kendawangan Nature Reserve, Ketapang Regency, West Kalimantan, Indonesia. It occurs in the Baccaurea lanceolata-Calophyllum inophyllum association of taxa. In Doi Suthep–Pui National Park, northern Thailand, it is one of the upper canopy trees of the Evergreen Forest formation, growing from 1,350m to 1,500m elevation. The species grows amongst the 16–22m high middle layer of the three levels of dense vine-tangled canopy occurring in the Dry Evergreen Forest community at the Sakae Rat Environmental Research Station, Pak Thong Chai District, northeastern Thailand. At Hazarikhil Wildlife Sanctuary, Chittagong Division, the tree's presence in Bangladesh was established for the first time since the only previous record made by Joseph Dalton Hooker in 1875. It had been thought extinct, it is now given a critically endangered status.
In Cambodia, the fruits of the trees known as -mchu:l are eaten, when ripe, while the wood is used in temporary constructions and for firewood.. The timber of the trees known as bâng' kew, bângkô:ng or bangkuv is valued highly in construction, even though it is a Third-class timber, with very low royalties due for extraction. The timber of this species is red, hard, and usually used for making carts, boats, furniture, etc.