Difference between revisions of "Iriartea deltoidea"

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File:id00987452.jpg|Costa Rica. Photo by Dr. Nelson Zamora.
 
File:id00987452.jpg|Costa Rica. Photo by Dr. Nelson Zamora.
 
File:Palm_Hunters.jpg|Me (Dr. Robin L. Chazdon, holding a modified crossbow used for sampling tall canopy tree leaves) and my field assistant Rigoberto G. Vargas posing in front of a downed Iriartea leaf frond for DNA extraction at La Selva Biological Field Station, Costa Rica. Photo by Dr. Robin L. Chazdon.
 
File:Palm_Hunters.jpg|Me (Dr. Robin L. Chazdon, holding a modified crossbow used for sampling tall canopy tree leaves) and my field assistant Rigoberto G. Vargas posing in front of a downed Iriartea leaf frond for DNA extraction at La Selva Biological Field Station, Costa Rica. Photo by Dr. Robin L. Chazdon.
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File:2008-05-07_12-26-24.jpg|Carara National Park, 2008 costa Rica. 2008 IPS Biennial. Jeff Searle (of Searle Brothers Nursery, FL.) out front. Photo by Ryan D. Gallivan.
 
image:IriAma.jpg|var. Amazonia. This is a form with large seeds from east of the Andes in Ecuador.  Rare Palm Seeds.com
 
image:IriAma.jpg|var. Amazonia. This is a form with large seeds from east of the Andes in Ecuador.  Rare Palm Seeds.com
 
image:IriPac.jpg|var. Pacific. This is a form with small, odd-shaped seeds from west of the Andes in Ecuador. Rare Palm Seeds.com
 
image:IriPac.jpg|var. Pacific. This is a form with small, odd-shaped seeds from west of the Andes in Ecuador. Rare Palm Seeds.com
 
image:IriRic.jpg|var. Costa Rica. Rare Palm Seeds.com
 
image:IriRic.jpg|var. Costa Rica. Rare Palm Seeds.com
File:2008-05-07_12-26-24.jpg|Carara National Park, 2008 costa Rica. 2008 IPS Biennial. Jeff Searle (of Searle Brothers Nursery, FL.) out front. Photo by Ryan D. Gallivan.
 
 
File:post-4111-0-03603900-1438721060.jpg|Mayaguez, PR. Photo by Cindy Adair.
 
File:post-4111-0-03603900-1438721060.jpg|Mayaguez, PR. Photo by Cindy Adair.
 
File:Iriartea_deltoidea_069.jpg
 
File:Iriartea_deltoidea_069.jpg

Revision as of 22:39, 23 September 2015

Iriartea (ihr-ee-ahr-TEH-ah) deltoidea (del-toh-ee-DEH-ah)
Iriartea infl 2 2011.jpg
Costa Rica. Iriartea in bud, flower, and fruit. The downward curved “bulls horn” bud is diagnostic of the species.
Scientific Classification
Genus: Iriartea (ihr-ee-ahr-TEH-ah)
Species: deltoidea (del-toh-ee-DEH-ah)
Synonyms
Deckeria corneto, Ceroxylon deltoideum, Iriartea gigantea, Iriartea megalocarpa.
Native Continent
America
America.gif
Morphology
Habit: Solitary
Leaf type: Pinnate
Height: 98 ft/30 m
Trunk diameter: 12 in/30 cm
Culture
Sun exposure: Partial Shade.
Watering: Moist
Soil type: Well drained.
Survivability index
Common names
Huacrapona, Chonta, Maquenque, Palmito dulce, corneto in Panama.

Habitat and Distribution

This palm extends from Nicaragua to Panama, and in other places in South America as Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Venezuela and Brazil.

Reserva Ecológica Catarata Río Fortuna, Costa Rica. Photo by Christian Defferrard.

Bolivia, Brazil North, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Nicaragua, Panamá, Peru, and Venezuela. Central America to Ecuador W of the Andes, and in the W part of the Amazon region from Venezuela to Bolivia. Perhaps the most common native tree species in Ecuador, occurring in all provinces that include moist lowland areas.

Description

A slow growing palm up to 98 ft./30 m. The trunks are grey, smooth and sometimes are loaded with epiphytes (bromeliads, orchids, ferns). The infrafoliar inflorescence is yellow or cream colored and comes out from a big green spathe with horn-like structure. The fruits are globose and green colored. The black stilt roots can reach 1 meter or less.

Canopy palm. Stem to 20 m tall and 20-40 cm in diameter, often swollen in the middle. Base supported by a 1-2 m tall cone of black stilt roots, these 3-5 cm in diameter. Leaves 4-6, 3-5 m long, bushy; pinnae numerous, longitudinally split, spreading in different planes, green on both sides. Inflorescence buds 1-3 m long, downwards curved, resembling a bulls horn. Inflorescence cream coloured in flower, the numerous pendulous branches to 1.5 m long, borne on a short curved axis. Fruits dull bluish black, globose, about 3 cm in diameter. (Borchsenius, F. 1998)/Palmweb. Editing by edric.

Stem more or less ventricose, to 25 m tall, 10-30 cm in diam. at base, 12-70 cm in diam. at swelling, 11-23 cm in diam. at apex, gray, smooth, with nodes obscure and internodes to 30 cm long; stilt roots to 100, terete, nearly vertical, closely spaced and forming a dense cone, branched at or below ground level, to 2 m x 3.5 cm, black, with sharp spines. Leaves 4-7, stiffly spreading; sheath forming a crownshaft, 60-150 cm long, glaucous, green, outer surface with brown or white scales; petiole terete, 2-13 x 3 cm (to 40 cm long when including narrow, apical, petiolar part of sheath), green, densely brown-tomentose; rachis ridged adaxially, rounded abaxially, 2-4.3 m long, densely whitish-tomentose abaxially, densely whitish-brown-tomentose adaxially; pinnae 15-27 per side of rachis, alternate, stiff, coriaceous, deltate with praemorse distal margins, lustrous green glabrous above, green glabrous below except for dense brown villi at base and on veins or occasionally villous overall, occasionally below with lines about 3 mm wide of dense white or brown tomentum running parallel to veins, the middle pinnae split to the base into numerous segments, the proximal one of a pinna largest and pendulous and all the distal ones smaller and pointing up and away from the axis and giving the leaf a two-ranked appearance (juvenile plants with entire pinnae); proximal pinna entire, 6-28 cm long, 0.5-8 cm wide at mid-point, erect; middle pinnae split into as many as 18 segments, the proximal one 50-98 (-122) cm long and 3-8 (-47) cm wide at mid-point and the distal one 19-34 cm long and 1-2.5 cm wide at mid-point; apical pinna entire, flabellate, 35-38 cm long, 17 cm wide at mid-point. Inflorescence pendulous at anthesis, to 2 m long, buds developing below crownshaft and erect at first, soon becoming de-curved and eventually horn-shaped; peduncle terete, curved, 20-44 cm long, half-encircling stem and then abruptly narrowing to 2-6 cm in diam., densely brown-velvety-tomentose, at anthesis with up to 16 bract scars; prophyll inserted at base of peduncle, triangular, bicarinate, 8 cm long, 7 cm wide at base, early caducous; peduncular bracts to 15, caducous as bud elongates, terete, with acute apex, splitting abaxially, the first about six similar to and only slightly longer than the prophyll, the remaining about nine longer, terete, horn-shaped eventually up to 120 cm long, sometimes an incomplete bract of variable size present; prophyll and peduncular bracts tomen-tose on the outside like the peduncle; rachis 14-46 cm long, of same diam. as peduncle at base and tapering into distal rachillae; rachillae 23-37, all simple or more often the proximal few bifurcate, at base with 3-6 cm swollen, flattened, sterile section, ± equal in length, 80-140 cm long, 5-8 mm in diam. at mid-point, subtended by a vestigial bract, glabrous; triads in as many as seven spirally arranged series, 2-6 mm apart, vestigially bracteate;flowers proximally in triads (rarely tetrads with two pistillate), distally sta-minate in pairs or solitary, or often all in an inflorescence staminate, yellowish at anthesis; staminate flowers up to 7 mm long; sepals depressed-ovate, imbricate, very briefly connate below, 2.5-3 x 2-4 mm, fleshy, gibbous, covered with long, stiff, caducous hairs; petals ovate-oblong, valvate, 7 x 3 mm; stamens (10-) 12-15 (-17); filaments triangular, 0.5 mm long; anthers linear, latrorse, sub-basifixed, 4-5 mm long; pistillode minute or absent; pollen with intectate, clavate exine; pistillate flowers 4 mm long; sepals fleshy, imbricate, 4-5 x 5 mm, ciliate; petals imbricate below, valvate above, fleshy, 4-5 x 5 mm; staminodes 10-13, adnate to base of petals, 1.5-2 mm long, apiculate; ovary 3-5 mm long, triangular in cross-section, 3-locular; stigmas sessile, triangular, 1 mm long, 1 mm in diam. at base, erect at anthesis; fruit globose, 2-2.7 x 2.4-2.8 cm including persistent expanded perianth; stigmatic residue sub-apical to apical; epicarp glabrous, greenish-yellow at maturity and splitting irregularly from apex; mesocarp whitish, granular, fibrous; endocarp papery; seed globose, 1.5 cm in diam., basally attached; raphe branches anastomosing; hilum rounded; embryo sub-apical to lateral; eophyll entire. (Henderson, A. 1990)/Palmweb.

Culture

Iriartea deltoidea can tolerate close to freezing conditions. But low temperatures are best avoided. It naturally occurs in wet rainforest or seasonally wet forest in low montane locations. In this type of natural environment temperature fluctuations are slight, and this palm prefers a constantly cool or mild climate with little temperature difference between day & night, and Summer & Winter. Under extreme cold conditions we recommend you keep this palm as dry as possible, and well wrapped up. Cold Hardiness Zone: 10a

Comments and Curiosities



External Links

References

Phonetic spelling of Latin names by edric.

Special thanks to Geoff Stein, (Palmbob) for his hundreds of photos.

Special thanks to Palmweb.org, Dr. John Dransfield, Dr. Bill Baker & team, for their volumes of information and photos.

Glossary of Palm Terms; Based on the glossary in Dransfield, J., N.W. Uhl, C.B. Asmussen-Lange, W.J. Baker, M.M. Harley & C.E. Lewis. 2008. Genera Palmarum - Evolution and Classification of the Palms. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. All images copyright of the artists and photographers (see images for credits).

Borchsenius, F.1998. Manual to the palms of Ecuador. AAU Reports 37. Department of Systematic Botany, University of Aarhus, Denmark in collaboration with Pontificia Universidad Catalica del Ecuador.

Henderson, A. 1990. Introduction and the Iriarteinae.


Many Special Thanks to Ed Vaile for his long hours of tireless editing and numerous contributions.

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