Dictyocaryum lamarckianum

Dictyocaryum lamarckianum
(Mart.) H.Wendl.


Original
reference:

Bot. Zeitung (Berlin) 21: 131 (1863)


Basionym:
Iriartea lamarckiana Mart.


Morphology:
Canopy palm. Stem solitary, erect, to 25 m tall and 40 cm in diameter, often swollen in the central part. Base supported by a 1-2 m tall, dense cone of black stilroots, these with numerous short, whitish root spines. Leaves 3-6, to 5 m long, strongly bushy; pinnae numerous, longitudinally split, jagged at the apex, silverish green below. Inflorescence to 2 m long, erect, with numerous long, pendulous branches, creamish yellow in flower. Fruit greenish yellow, globose, ca. 3 cm in diameter.



Distribution:
Patchily distributed from Panama to Bolivia along the Andes, in premontane moist to wet forest, often very abundant in a certain (variable) altitudinal range. In Ecuador it is found on both sides of the Andes.

Notes:
Closely related to Iriartea which it resembles in flower structure and protandrous flowering pattern.


Common
names:

Bonbon

Spanish

(Borchsenius et al. 1998).

Guagrachango

Spanish

(Borchsenius et al. 1998).

Palma

Spanish

(H. Balslev #4293 and additional references).

Palma real

Spanish

(H. Balslev #60671).

Uses:

Immature, tender inflorescenses are edible
(V.v.d. Eynden #583).

Seeds used for counting practices by the young
(H. Balslev #4293).

Stem used for fence poles, said to last 4 years
(H. Balslev #4293).

Synonym
list
(6)

Specimen
list