Palm

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Read about Palm in the Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture 

Palm; Palms are amongst the most striking plants in tropical floras. The tall mostly straight unbranched trunks surmounted by a spreading canopy of huge pinnate or digitate leaves distinguish them from nearly all other forms of vegetation. They are widely spread in warm regions, being most abundant in America and Asia and few in Africa. They are particularly conspicuous in the Pacific Islands. Although the palms are such bold and interesting plants, the species are imperfectly understood. This is due to the great difficulty of making herbarium specimens, to the fact that the greater number of botanists are residents of regions in which palms do not grow, and to the differences of opinion as to the relative importance of the various botanical characters. Many of the palms have been named first from cultivated specimens,

and often before the flowers and fruits are known. When the specimens finally come to fruit, the

names are usually shifted, causing much confusion. The proper generic position of a palm may be

unknown for several years after it becomes popular in the horticultural trade. Consider the

changes in nomenclature which have occurred in palms that have been referred to the genera Areca

and Kentia.

The species of palms are not very numerous as compared with orchids, composites and grasses.

They probably do not greatly exceed 1,200, as at present known, although more than that number

have been described. Bentham & Hooker accept 132 genera, and Drude, in Engler & Prantl's

"Pflanzenfamilien," accept 128 genera. Most of the genera are small, and many of them are

monotypic. The largest genera are Calamus, with about 200 species, all Old World, mostly Asian;

Geonoma, with about 100 species, all American; Baetns, about 100, American; Chamsedorea, with

about 60, all American; Licuala, with 30, ranging from eastern Asia to Australia; Desmoncus,

about 25, American; Cocos; 30, all confined to America but the coconut, which is now

cosmopolitan; Pinanga, with about 25 species, of the oriental tropics; Areca, nearly two dozen,

oriental. Many of the species, particularly in the small genera, are restricted to very small

geographical regions, often to one island or to a group of islands. The palms represent an old

type of vegetation, and they are now, probably, on the decline, as measured

in geological epochs.—Perhaps the most complete account of the botany of certain groups of palms

is by 0. Beccari in such works as: "The species of Calamus," "Le Palme Americane della tribu

della Corypheae," "Notes on Philippine Palms," and many smaller papers. O. F. Cook has also

written extensively of the American species.

General characteristics.

The members of this family are essentially tropical in habitat, are highly ornamental in

appearance, and many of them also of very great economic value, their fruits, stems and leaves

not only entering largely into the manufactured products of both Europe and America

but also providing both food and shelter for thousands of the inhabitants of tropical countries.

One notable characteristic of palms in general is their unbranched stems, the exceptions to this

rule being very few and mostly limited to the members of one genus, Hyphaene, of which the doum

palm of Egypt, H. thebaica, is the best example. While these unbranched stems form a prominent

feature in connection with this order of plants, yet great variations are found in size and

habit, some of them towering up like a slender marble shaft to a height of more than 100 feet

and then terminating in a crown of magnificent plume-like leaves, while others may reach a

height of only 3 to 4 feet when fully developed, and some species are permanently stemless. In

some examples the stems are so long and slender that a scandent habit is the result; these

rope-like stems of the rattan palms in particular are described as wandering through the tops of

some of the great trees of the Malayan Peninsula to a length of several hundred feet, —reported

as long as 1,700 feet, but report unreliable.

The foliage of the palms is of two chief kinds, the fan-veined leaves, in which the venation

radiates from a common center, and the feather-veined, in which the veins run out from the sides

of a long midrib, the leaf being frequently divided into long narrow segments. Of the first

group, the common fan palm, Livistona chinensis, is a good example, while the date palm, Phoe-

nix dactylifera, and also the coconut, Cocos nucifera, are common examples of the feather-veined

class. There are also minor characteristics of foliage that mark many of the genera; some having

pinnate leaves with erose tips, a few having bipinnate leaves (as Car-yota urens), others with

flabellate leaves having erose segments, and many with the segments of the leaves bifid or split

at the tips.

The flowers of palms in general are not specially attractive either in size or coloring, many of

them being greenish white or yellow, and some orange or red; but these flowers are produced in

prodigious quantities by some of the species, perhaps the most prolific in this respect being

the talipot palm (Corypha umbraculifera), which throws up a branching inflorescence to a height

of 30 feet above the foliage, such an inflorescence having been estimated to include fully

60,000,000 flowers! This, of course, applies only to wild specimens.

The seeds of palms are also found in many sizes and various shapes, ranging from the size of a

pea in some of the Thrinax to the unwieldy fruit of the double coconut, Lodoicea. maldivica,

which will sometimes weigh forty pounds each and require several years to reach maturity.

As a rule, the members of any single genus of palms are found in one hemisphere, either the

eastern or western as the case may be, probably the greater number of species being of Asiatic

and American origin, rather than African. An apparent exception is found to this system of

hemispheric distribution in the case of the coconut, this plant being so very widely distributed

throughout the tropical world that its original habitat is still in doubt. On the other hand,

some species are known to be very local in their natural state, in proof of which the howeas may

be cited ; this genus has been found only within the circumscribed area of Lord Howe's Island,

which, from a comparative point of view, may be termed merely a fragment of land (probably of

volcanic origin), a mere dot on the broad bosom of the South Pacific.

Few palms are found within the limits of the United States as natives, the most common being the

well-known palmetto, Sabal Palmetto, a member of the fan-leaved section, to which many of the

American palms belong. But while the species of palms native in the United States are limited in

numbers, yet there is at least one unique species in the group in the form of Pseudophoenix

Sargentii, a monotypic palm, that is known to exist in a wild state only on certain of the

Florida Keys, and in limited numbers even there, and recently in Cuba and Santo Domingo.

Europe is even less favored as to native palms, there being but one species known there in that

condition, Chamaerops humilis, also a fan-leaved species and comparatively hardy, being capable

of enduring moderate frosts.

The palm tree of the Bible is doubtless the date palm, Phoenix dactylifera, which is found in

large numbers throughout Syria to this day; and in fact the small grove of dates within easy

reach of the Syrian householder forms one of his most valuable assets, for it provides food not

only for his family, but frequently for his horses or camels also.

The act of producing flowers does not necessarily terminate the life of a palm, though in some

instances such an effect may be produced by this cause; but a singular habit has been noted in

regard to the flowering of the fish-tail palm. Caryoto urens, which when it reaches maturity

begins to throw out a flower-spike from the top of the stem, this being followed by successive

spikes of flowers, and ultimate bunches of seeds from the top of the plant downward, the

flower-spikes appearing at the joints of the stem, and when this process of flowering has

proceeded down to the ground, or until the vitality of the plant has been exhausted, death

ensues.

There are also a number of species of palms that develop a soboliferous habit, throwing up a

number of shoots from the base of the plant, Rhapis flabelliformis, sometimes known as the

ground rattan, being a good example of this class, among which the widely grown and elegant

Chrysalidocarpus lutescens is also found, together with the geonomas, some of the phoenix and

various other genera. Many of the palms are unisexual, but there are also many others in which

both male and female flowers are produced on the same spadix, in some examples the males being

grouped together near the ends of the branches of the inflorescence and the females nearer to

the main stem, while in others a female is placed between two males, thus arranging the flowers

in threes.

Cross-pollination of palms by artificial means has probably been seldom practised, there being

few cultivated collections in which the opportunity for such an operation has presented itself;

but it seems highly probable that such cross-fertilization has been accidentally effected among

wild plants, for in large lots of seedlings intermediate forms are frequently seen, this

peculiarity having been noted among howea seedlings, where forms intermediate between H.

Belmoreana and H. Forsteriana are found, and sometimes seedlings that seem to combine the

characteristics of H. Belmo-reana and those of its near relative Hedyscepe Canter- buryana.

Similar variations from a given type have also been noted among the phoenix, several so-called

species being most likely merely varieties.

Many palms are armed with stout thorns or prickles, not only the stems but also the leaves and

even the fruits in some species being thus guarded, these prickles being usually very hard and

tough. In some cases, notably Acanthorhiza aculeala, the prickles around the stem are often

branched, and are decidedly unpleasant to come in contact with. In the case of Desmoncus, this

being the western representative of the rattan palms, the tip of the midrib of the leaf is

continued in the form of a hooked spine, and helps to support the plant in its scandent career.

The sharp spines of certain palms are used for poisoned arrows by some of the South American

tribes, these arrows being projected through a blow-pipe formed from a section of the hollow

stem of another palm. Among the species of Phoenix, it is often found that several of the

leaflets nearest to the base of the leaf are developed as spines, these thorny leaflets becoming

stiff and hard, and capable of making a very sore wound.

The very great economical value of many of the palms can only be touched upon within the limits

of the present article, the uses to which not only the fruits but also the stems and leaves are

put by the natives of many tropical countries being enough of themselves to fill volumes. One

prominent example of this great utility is the Palmyra palm, of which a Hindoo poet enumerated

over 800 different uses. Other notable examples include

the coconut palm, the fruits of which are imported by hundreds of tons every year, and in

addition to providing a valuable food, either fresh or in a desiccated condition, also produce

that very valuable fiber from which cordage, matting and a great variety of goods are

manufactured; also the Phoenix family, which produces the dates of commerce in apparently

endless supply, and the date sugar of Bengal, this being contributed by Phoenix sylvestris,

while the stems of date palms are often used in house-building in the East. Another very

valuable palm product is found in palm oil, this being largely derived from the fruits of Elaeis

guineensis, the oil being expressed from the ripe fruits in much the same manner that olive oil

is manufactured. The rattan of commerce is chiefly composed of the flexible stems of various

calami, the plentiful supply of this material being sufficiently attested by the great variety

of articles manufactured therefrom. Various palms have been mentioned under the name of "wine

palm," but it seems likely that some species of Raphia are most used for liquors, some portions

of these palms giving a large amount of sap when tapped, and as the juice is rich in sugar, the

sap soon ferments and may become strongly alcoholic. The best sago is produced from the pith of

Metroxy-lon or Sagus, the trees being cut down and split into segments for the removal of the

pith, the latter being then prepared in a rough granulated form for export. Sago is also

procured from Caryota and some other genera, but the product is not equal to that of Metroxy-

lon. The so - called whale - bone brooms frequently used in stables and for street- cleaning are

mostly made from Piassaba (or Piacaba) fiber, this being gathered from around the base of plants

of attaleas, mostly A. funifera. The attaleas also produce large seeds or nuts, those of A.

funifera being known as coquilla-nuts, and very largely used for ornamental purposes, being very

hard and capable of receiving a fine polish. Many small articles are manufactured from vegetable

ivory, this being secured from the nuts of Phytelephas macrocarpa, a singular palm from South

America, bearing a large fruit in which are contained from six to nine of the ivory-nuts, the

plant itself having a short and sometimes creeping stem from which proceeds a noble head of

pinnate fronds that are frequently 15 to 20 feet in length. The seeds of Areca Catechu, after

preparation with lime and the leaves of the pepper-plant, become the betel-nut of the East

Indies, so much used by the natives of that portion of the world as a mild stimulant. The

cabbage palm of the West Indies is Oreodoxa oleracea, the smooth and straight stems of which are

frequently 80 to 100 feet high, and the removal of the "cabbage," so-called, means the

destruction of such a tree, for the portion eaten is composed of the central bud in which the

young leaves are compactly gathered together.

Botanical structure.

As the trunk of the palm rises, the leaves underneath the crown die and fall. Usually the old

petioles, or

their bases, remain for some time, forming a shaggy capital to the column; this is well marked

in the large or cabbage palmetto of the South. The palms are mostly trees, and sometimes rise to

the height of nearly 200 feet, but some are climbing and others are low shrubs. Some palms are

only a foot or two tall at

maturity, as Malortiea. In some species the stems are

prickly. Usually they make very straight comely boles, but a few species produce branches above.

The inflorescence of palms usually arises underneath or in the crown, from the axils of the

leaves. The clusters are really spadices, although often branched, and are covered in the bud by

a dry spathe composed of one or several leaves or parts. The remains of these spathes are well

shown in Fig. 2538 (page 2298). In the upper cluster on the left, the spathe is arching over the

fruits. The blossoms are relatively small, and usually dull colored and not show}-, but in some

species the spadix is scarlet or yellow and often very gracefully branched. The spathes are

sometimes immense woody coverings, like troughs or bowls.

The flowers of palms are not greatly differentiated or specialized. The essential structure may

be understood by comparing the details in Figs. 2725 to 2731, which are adapted from Beccari's

account of palms indigenous to Cuba in Pomona College Journal of Economic Botany, February,

1913. Of most palms, the flowers are small or minute, quite regular, and they may be either

hermaphrodite, monoecious, or dioecious. Often the whole flower is nearly woody, even the

perianth-parts being hard and scarcely resembling petals. In most species there are two series

of perianth - parts: three distinct imbricated sepals inclosing three distinct or partially

united petals. Many modifications of this arrangement are known, however, as in the case of

cer-


tain species of Thrinax where the perianth is reduced and deformed, and of Nenga where the

sepals are longer than the petals. There are nearly always six stamens, both in the pistillate

and staminate flowers, and except in certain species of Oreodoxa (Roystonea) they are always

included. They are often in two series, one opposite the sepals, the other opposite the petals,

always free, and nearly always inserted on the short perianth-tube. The anthers are linear,

oblong or arrow- shaped, two-celled, the pollen usually ellipsoid or nearly round, very rarely

minutely spiny. The ovary is free, ovoid or oblong or globose, and often found in a rudimentary

form even in staminate flowers, but sometimes lacking in the latter. There are mostly three

cells, but four and even up to seven cells are known in rare cases. The ovule in each cell is

solitary and almost always erect.

Great variety characterizes palm fruits. Some are dry and hard almost stone-like fruits, others

are fleshy and even drupe-like. In many species there is a hard fibrous coating to the fruit, as

in the case of the coco-

nut. In other species the seed is free, but often it adheres to the inner coat of the fruit; it

nearly always contains a copious albumen.

The individual flowers and fruits of palms are borne on a large inflorescence (spadix) which may

or may not be inclosed in a sheath-like structure (spathe). The form and branching of this

spadix varies much. One character that seems to hold is that of the branching, in one group of

genera the spadix being either simple or imperfectly branched, if compound then paniculate, such

as is found in Geonoma, Euterpe, and allied genera; and in others the spadix is always pinnately

branched, the ultimate branches distichous if greater ramification is present.

Horticultural importance, and culture.

Palms have been favorite greenhouse subjects from the period of the first development of the

glass plant- house. The stereotyped form of conservatory is a broad or nearly square structure,

with narrow benches around the sides over the heating-pipes and a palm-bed in the center. In

these conservatories a variety of palms will succeed, requiring neither a very high temperature

nor much direct sunlight. (Fig. 2732.) In fact, palms usually succeed best under shaded roofs. The palms are most satisfactory in their young state, before the trunks become very prominent,

and before the crowns reach the glass. The larger number in houses have pinnate or pinnatisect

leaves, and these species are usually the more graceful in habit, although the fan palms are

also much prized. Small palms are now in great demand for room and table decoration, and a few

species are grown in enormous quantities for this trade. They are sold when small. They usually

perish before they are large enough to be cumbersome. Among the most popular of these palms are

Chrysalidocarpus lutescens, Howea Belmoreana and H. Forsteriana, Cocos Weddelliana, Livistona

chinensis, and possibly one or two species of Phoenix.

Some palms endure considerable frost without injury. Of such are the sabals and the palmettoes

of the southern states. The saw palmetto (Serenoa serrulata) and the blue palmetto

(Rhapidophyllum Hystrix) occur as far north as South Carolina. In Asia, Nannorhops occurs

naturally as far north as 34° and grows in the mountains of Afghanistan where snow falls, and in

Europe. Chamaerops (the only palm indigenous to Europe) reaches 44 degrees .

The genera chiefly known to horticulturists are the following:

Tribe Areceae. Lvs. pinnatisect, the lfts. free or joined

so as to form a plaited limb, the sides in vernation

reduplicate: fls. monoecious or dioecious: seeds

umbilicate, with ventral raphe and dorsal embryo.

Areca, Pinanga, Kentia, Hydriastele, Kentiopsis,

Hedyscepe, Nenga, Archontophoenix, Rhopalostylis,

Dictyosperma, Ptychosperma, Cyrtostachys, Drymo-

phloeus, Cyphophoenix, Clinostigma, Cyphosperma,

Euterpe, Acanthophoenix, Oreodoxa, Acrista, Bacularia,

Linospadix, Howea, Ceroxylon, Verschaffeltia, Dypsis,

Chamaedorea, Hyophorbe, Roscheria, Geonoma, Calyp-

trogyne, Bentinckia, Wallichia, Didymosperms, Arenga,

Caryota, Phytelephas, Pseudophoenix, Oenocarpus.

Tribe Phoeniceae. Lvs. pinnatisect, segms. acuminate and with induplicate sides in vernation:

spadices interfoliar, the spathe solitary: fls. dioecious: carpels 3, only 1 maturing, the

stigma terminal; seed strongly ventrally sulcate, the embryo usually dorsal. Phoenix.

Tribe Corypheae. Lvs. fan-shaped, wedge-shaped or orbicular, plaited, more or less cut, the

lobes with induplicate sides: spadices interfoliar, the spathes many: fls. usually perfect;

ovary entire or 3-lobed or sometimes the 1-3 carpels distinct, the ovule erect; pericarp usually

smooth; seeds with ventral raphe and small hilum.

Corypha, Sabal, Washingtonia, Chamaerops, Rha- pidophyllum, Acanthorhiza, Brahea, Erythea,

Pritch-ardia, Licuala, Livistona, Trachycarpus, Rhapis, Thrinax, Nannorhops, Serenoa,

Copernicia, Teys-mannia, Trithrinax, Coccothrinax.

Tribe Lepidocaryeae. Lvs. pinnatisect or fan-shaped, the segms. with reduplicate sides in

vernation: spadices terminal or axillary, the spathes numerous: fls. polygamo-monoecious; ovary

entire, more or less 3-loculed: fr. clothed with reflexed, shining, imbricate, appressed scales;

seed with dorsal raphe and ventral embryo. Calamus, Ceratolobus, Raphia.

Tribe Borasseae. Lvs. orbicular, the segms. fan-shaped and the sides induplicate. spadices

interfoliar, the spathes many and sheathing: fls. dioecious, the male minute and sunk in

cavities on the spadix, the female very large, ovary entire, 3-loculed, the ovule ascending: fr.

various. Borassus, Lodoicea, Latania, Hyphaene.


Tribe Cocoineae. Lvs. pinnatisect, the lfts. with reduplicate sides: spadices interfoliar,

unisexual or androgynous, the spathes 2 or more: inferfoliar fls. often in 3's, the middle one

female; ovary 1-7-loculed: fr. large, drupe-like, 1-7-loculed, the stigma terminal, the endocarp

or shell hard and woody and provided with 3-7 pores.

Bactris, Astrocaryum, Acrocomia, Martinezia, Elaeis,

Diplothemium, Cocos, Maximiliana, Scheelea, Attalea,

Jubaea, Desmoncus.

There is very little accessible monographic literature on the palms. Martius' "Historia

Naturalis Palmarum,"

Munich, three volumes, 1823 to 1850, is

a standard work. Kerchove de Denterghem's "Les Palmiers," Paris, 1878, is

an important work, A popular running

account of palms and the various kinds,

by William Watson, will be found in the

following places in Gardeners' Chronicle:

1884 (volume 22), pages 426, 522, 595,

728, 748; 1885 (volume 23), pages 338,

410, 439; 1885 (volume 24), pages 362, 394, 586, 748; 1886 (volume 25), pages 75, 139, 557; 1886

(volume 26) pages 491, 652; 1887 (volume 2, series 3) pages 156, 304; 1891 (volume 9), pages

234, 298, 671; 1893 (volume 13), pages 260, 332.

Palm-culture, for decorative purposes in the United States, has made its greatest progress

within the past twenty-five years, and now seems to be a well-established business, with the

prospect of a steady increase as the adaptability of these plants becomes better understood. A

great area of glass is now in use for palm-culture alone, the middle states being the center of

this industry, though large numbers are also grown in a few southern states; and owing to a

favorable climate and gradually improving business methods, it seems probable that American

growers will soon be able to compete with their more experienced brethren of Europe in this

class of plants.

The species most used in commercial horticulture in the United States are contained in a very

short list, the greater quantity being confined to five species, namely, Livistona chinensis,

Howea Belmoreana, Howea Forsteriana, Chrysalidocarpus lutescens, and Cocos Weddelliana, while

less quantities of Caryota urens, several species of Phoenix, P. canariensis being very largely

planted outdoors in the South and on portions of the Pacific coast. Seaforthia elegans and some

others of the Ptycho- sperma group, and some few livistonas cover the extent of the catalogue

for many growers.

Of these, the seeds are imported in most cases, and on the quality of these seeds the success of

the grower depends, so far as getting up a stock is concerned. Most of these species germinate

readily in a warm greenhouse, providing the seeds are fresh, the slowest of the common

commercial palms being the howeas. In small quantities these seeds are usually sown in about

6-inch pots, the pots being well drained

and nearly filled with light soil, then the seeds sown thickly and covered with 1/2 inch of

soil, watered thoroughly and placed where they may receive the benefit of some bottom heat; and

at no time should they be allowed to become very dry. The period required for germination varies

greatly with different species, Livistona chinensis germinating in two or three weeks if fresh,

and being ready for potting in about two months, while seeds of some of the attaleas have been

known to remain in the earth for fully three years before starting.

The seedlings of many species are very much alike, the seed-leaf in many instances being a long

narrow simple leaflet, this description often applying equally to the seedlings of both

fan-leaved and pinnate-leaved species; and from this fact it is somewhat difficult to recognize

a species while in the juvenile form. Figs. 2733-2736 show stages in the germination of common

palms. Special cultural notes for particular species of palms will be found throughout the

Cyclopedia, but at this time a few general remarks regarding treatment of palms as a whole may

be admissible. It has already been noted that palms in general are tropical in nature, and while

there are a number of species that are found at considerable elevations, where the nights are

decidedly cool, yet in a young state the same species may make more progress in a night

temperature of 60° F.; and with this in view, a minimum temperature during the winter of 56° to

60° is safest for young and growing palms, while an advance of 15° to 20° during the day will

not hurt them.

An abundance of water is required, for many palms grow on the banks of rivers or in swampy

ground; and even those found on high and rocky ground send their roots down to such a depth as

to find a liberal water- supply.

Rotted sod is the basis for the best soil for palms, and a fair proportion of stable manure is a

safe fertilizer, such a soil being mixed with various proportions of peat or sand, to make it

lighter and more open for some delicate species.

Insects are frequently troublesome if allowed to gain headway, various scale insects doing the

greatest damage, while red-spiders and thrips may become established unless forcible syringing

is persisted in. The most successful practice requires close observation on the part of the

grower, and the prompt removal of all insects. Many other pests are also known and in the report

of the Missouri Botanical Garden for 1898, Trelease gives an account of many of these. Busch in

a report on investigation of diseases of the coconut palm in United States Department of

Agriculture Bulletin of Entomology II. 38, 1902, gives an account of a disease that threatened

the coconut industry in Trop. America.

Summer care of palms.

Some shading throughout the summer is best, the foliage grown under glass being more tender than

that

naturally produced outdoors. Repotting should be done during the spring and summer months,

preferably, there being comparatively little root-action oh the part of most palms between

November 1 and March 1. Give only moderate-sized shifts, that is, use pots only 1 or 2 inches

larger, and always ram the soil firmly.

Florists especially must understand the summer treatment of decorative palms. The usual weather

of midsummer, which includes not only high temperature, but also fairly high humidity, is a help

for the grower of palms, for such conditions do much to promote the growth of the stock,

provided that watering, syringing, and proper attention to ventilation be given. A little

ventilation at night, in addition to fairly liberal airing during the day, tends to prevent an

over- accumulation of moisture on the foliage, and also has an influence toward the prevention

of fungoid growths on or

about the plants, for in houses so continually warm and moist as is the average palm-house,

there is much encouragement for fungus on the woodwork of the benches and about the plants.

A sprinkling of slaked lime under the benches is also a help to the atmosphere and discourages

snails to some extent, the latter pest being sometimes very troublesome, especially on the young

growths of kentias. Two of the worst periods for the reproduction of scale insects are in the

months of May and September, and if these posts can be kept down at those periods, there will be

much less trouble in the remainder of the year.

Those who grow palms in quantity have to depend upon dips and spraying with various

insecticides, from the fact that it is practically impossible to give the time to each plant

that may be afforded by those who carry only a few dozens of palms in stock, but in either case

most of the work of this character is likely to be done in the summer months, when there may be

a little more time devoted to such work than can be spared in the busier seasons of spring and

fall. This fact probably accounts for some of the insect tribulations to which the grower is

exposed, as he is seldom able to find time to fight insects at the time of the spring rush, and

by this means new colonies are distributed before the danger is appreciated.

Kentias and cocos are undoubtedly the palms for the million at this stage of the florists' art

in America, and the necessities of these admirable plants are well understood. Seaforthias and

ptychospermas were rather more common to the trade fifteen to twenty years ago than they are

now, and were used for decorative work before the kentias absorbed so much attention. Instead of

using seaforthias for decorating, persons are adding them to the outdoor garden in those parts

of the South where palms add so greatly to the permanent effect in the outdoor planting.

The common Phoenix canariensis and other strong- growing members of that subfamily are also

frequently in demand for outdoor use, while the dwarf date, Phoenix Roebelenii, continues to be

in demand for house decoration, under which condition it is eminently satisfactory; it has found

further usefulness even in small sizes, in being used to some extent for the centers of

fern-pans. Livistona rotundifolia is one of the most charming of dwarf palms, but is easily

spoiled by insects, requiring constant vigilance on that account, while a comparatively high

temperature and moist atmosphere are also essential to its welfare.

Palms in California.

Palms grown in the open in California gardens do not exceed about twenty-six genera, and

numbering about eighty species. In this account may be found the species growing in the gardens

of Los Angeles and vicinity, and throughout southern California in limited numbers from San

Diego to Santa Barbara. Occasional plants of species not mentioned are found in some old

gardens, but are not so plentiful as to be considered in a general list of the hardy palms. A

complete list of palms grown somewhere in southern California is given by Franceschi as follows:

Archonto- phoenix, 2 species; Hedyscepe, 1; Rhopalostylis, 2; Clinostigma, 1; Bacularia, 1;

Howea, 2; Chamaedorea, 10; Gaussia, 1; Phoenix, 10; Sabal, 10; Washingtonia, 3; Chamaerops, 1;

Rhapidophyllum, 1; Serenoa, 2; Brahea, 3; Erythea, 4; Pritchardia, 2; Livistona, 6;

Trachycarpus, 2; Rhapis, 2; Thrinax, 2; Trithrinax, 2; Copernicia, 1; Acrocomia, 1; Cocos, 10;

Jubaea, 1.

In enumerating the prevailing garden palms, they are placed as to their importance, or rather as

to their numerical strength in California. The native fan-palms, the washingtonias, natives of

San Bernardino and San Diego counties, have been most extensively planted, and may be found

everywhere, serving, in some instances, a variety of purposes. (Fig. 2737.) In growing this

palm, water is of the first importance. When planted along a street, those adjoining vacant lots

often remain nearly at a standstill, except in case of an unusually wet winter, while those

along the cultivated lots or lawns grow faster than any other palm. When one in its native

habitat blows over by the force of the desert winds, the hole left by the roots and stump

invariably fills with water. Washingtonias are hardy 600 miles north of Los Angeles. It may be

well to state that hardiness in palms is principally a question of size, the larger ones passing

through the most severe winter unharmed, while the small ones may perish. So, also, some palms

supposed to be very tender need protection from sun more than from frost. This is particularly

the case with the so-called kentias and rhapis. A certain howea (or Kentia Forsteriana] is

protected only by a large overhanging branch of a sycamore, which is of course leafless in cold

weather, yet it has reached a height of 12 feet, with a diameter at base of 12 inches, and it

has never been injured by frost, yet water hydrants 10 feet away have been frozen so hard as to

burst them. In Los Angeles is a kentia 15 feet high, growing on the north side of a house,

protected from sun alone, being 20 feet from the building, where for several winters the ground

nearby has frozen to the depth of 1 inch. This is in the bottom-lands, the coldest part of the

city.

Phoenix dactylifera, although not so ornamental as others of the genus, was extensively planted

in early days and is one of the hardiest of palms (Fig. 2738). The most popular palm for the

masses, who look for grace and beauty combined with cheapness, is Phoenix canariensis. More of

these are planted at present than of any other three species. In Los Angeles and

vicinity they may be counted by tens of thousands. Like these two for hardiness is P. reclinata;

and all may be seen growing north of San Francisco some 200 miles. All the genus is hardy in

southern California. Trachycarpus excelsus and Chamaerops humilis, the latter varying greatly in

appearance, will grow as far north as any palms and are popular everywhere. The former in thirty

years will grow to the height of 25 feet, while the latter will make 8 to 10 feet of trunk in

the same time. Livistona australis and L. chinensis are both popular, though not hardy outside

the southern part of the state, and the latter must be shaded from noonday sun. Erythea armata

and E. edulis (often known as braheas) grow around San Francisco Bay luxuriantly. The dwarf

sections of Cocos, represented chiefly by the one known in the trade as Cocos australis, is

hardy even farther north than the erytheas, and are by far the most ornamental palms to be found

in that section. Other cocos in southern California are C. flexuosa, C. plumosa, C. coronata, C.

Romanzoffiana, and many others. Any cocos will grow here in protected places except C. Wed-

delliana. Palms of the Cocos flexuosa-plumosa-Roman-zoffiana type are the most graceful grown,

and at present very extensively planted in the southern citrous belt, sometimes for street or

sidewalk trees. It is also one of the fastest growers, and will reach 20 feet in fifteen years,

with ordinary care. Archontophoenix Alexandrae and A. Cunninghamii, the most elegant of our

palms after the Cocos plumosa type, are not quite so hardy but will thrive from Santa Barbara

southward, in warm locations. The same exposures, with shade during the hottest part of the day,

will do for Hedyscepe Canterburyana and Howea Forsteriana and H. Bel- moreana; also

Rhopalostylis Baueri and R. sapida. The

four species of sabals seem to thrive and seed well in this section, though S. Palmetto and S.

Blackburnianum grow much faster than the others. Rhapidophyllum Hystrix is perfectly hardy, but

on account of its dwarf habit is not so extensively planted as its merits deserve. Rhapis

flabelliformis and R. humilis need protection from sun alone, though there is a rhapis growing

for ten years without protection from either sun or frost, and in the coldest section of Los

Angeles, but its color is not all that could be desired. Chamaedoreas are planted only where

they can be protected from both frost and sun, though they thrive better under such

circumstances than they do under glass. In such situations they are just the plant for the

purpose, as they do not grow away from the protecting tree as do sun- and light- loving palms,

but remain erect. Brahea dulcis may occasionally be seen, but grows too slowly to be popular.

One of the grandest and hardiest palms, one that deserves for many reasons to be more

extensively planted, is Jubaea spectabilis. There are a few specimens 20 feet in height with a

bole 4 feet in diameter.

List of California palms. (Wright.)

The following list of palms for southern California has been compiled from many years of

observation by J. Harrison Wright. While not entirely complete as regards the newest and untried

introductions, it covers all the hardier species and it is made with special reference to the

effects of the severe frosts of January, 1913.

I. Hardy Palms.

Withstand a minimum temperature of 18° to 20° F. with little or no injury.

Chamaeropa humilis (in a

dozen varieties). Cocos Alphonsii. Cocos Bonnetii. Cocos campestria. Cocob eriospatha. Cocoa flexuosa (of Hort.). Cocos Gaertneri. Cocoa Yatay. Erythea armata. Erythea edulis. Jubaea spectabilis. Phoenix canariensis. Phoenix dactylifera.

Phoenix reclinata. Phoenix sylvestris. Sabal Adansonii. Sabal Blackburniana. Sabal mexicana. Sabal Palmetto. Sabal princeps. Serenoa serrulata. Trachycarpus excelsa. Trachycarpus Martiana. Washingtonia gracilis. Washingtonia robusta. Washingtonia Sonorae.


The following require protection from sun in the interior valleys:

Livistona australis. Livistona chinensis. Phoenix Roebelenii.

Rhapidophyllum Hystrix. Rhapis flabelliformis. Rhapis humilis.

The above are rather generally found and to them may be added the following, equally hardy but

not yet in general cultivation:

Brahea calcarea.

Brahea Pimo.

Cocoa Arechavaletana.

Cocob australis (true). Cocoa Datil.

Above are tall-growing Cocos of the plumosa type but hardy.

Cocos odorata. Nannorhops Ritchiana.

Cocob pulposa. Trachycarpus caespitosa.

Erythea Brandegei. Trithnnax braziliensis.

Erythea elegans. Trithrinax campestris.

All the above can be grown wherever oranges are planted, and in addition the following are at

home on the hill section of Los Angeles, in the frost-free foothills and sheltered coastal

valleys like Santa Barbara and the Montecito.

II. Tender Palms.

Chamaedorea desmoncoides. Chamaedorea elegans. Cocob botryophora. Cocos plumosa. Cocob Mariae-Reginae. Cocob Romanzoffiana. Howea Belmoreans. Howea Forsteriana. Livistona Jenkinsoniana.

Livistona Mariae. Phoenix rupicola. Pritchardia Gaudichaudii. Pritchardia pacifica. Ptychosperma Alexandrae. Ptychosperma Cunninghamiana (Seaforthia). Rhopalostylis Baueri. Rhopalostylis sapida.

The following have been recently introduced, but are not thoroughly tested:

Ceroxylon andicolum. Copernicia australis. Juania australis.

Livistona decipiens. Sabal Uresana. Sabal Exul.

[Juania australis, Drude, representing a monotypic genus in the Island Juan Fernandez (and for

the first word of which it is named); is an unarmed palm with pinnatisect terminal lvs. allied

to Ceroxylon: lf.-segms. long and narrow, acuminate, whitish beneath, thickened on the margins:

fr. globular, size of a cherry.]

Ernest Braunton.

Hardy palms in Florida.

A large proportion of the various species of palms tried by the writer in Florida have succeeded

from moderately to exceedingly well. Close to 200 species belonging to some 60 genera have been

in cultivation and of these more than 150 are surviving. The state itself is rich in palms for a

region lying wholly outside the tropics, there being not less than fifteen native and one

naturalized species, the latter the common coconut, found within its borders. A few of these,

such as Sabal Palmetto, Serenoa serrulata and Rhapidophyllum among native forms, and one or two

species of Trachycarpus, one or two of the dates, Jubaea spectabilis and Washingtonia should be

fairly hardy, especially along the coastal region, throughout most of the northern part of the

state.

Most of the palms which do well in this state succeed on ordinary pine land, but their growth

would be improved if a liberal amount of muck or leaf-mold was incorporated with the soil, and a

heavy mulch is always beneficial. Of course in poor soils a good fertilizer is necessary and it

is an excellent plan to apply one rich in potash in the fall in order to harden up the growth

for winter.

Nearly all the palms must be propagated from seed; only a few are cespitose, such as

chrysalidocarpus, rhapis. most of the phoenix and chamaedoreas, and these can often be

propagated from suckers. When these are thrown out above the ground it is best to make an

incision at their bases and set a flower-pot underneath, mounding up with earth around the

sucker, when it

will generally throw out roots into the pot, after which it may be severed and the whole

removed.

The entire state is subject to "northers" during which the wind blows from the northwest, and

cold weather and frost may occur in any part of the state. A large part of the palms which can

be 'grown in Florida are tropical and if their seeds when in the ground are subjected to such a

degree of cold they are almost sure to perish. If one is propagating any considerable number of

palms, it will pay to have a frame covered with a sash or sashes. This can be sunk in the ground

if necessary; the seeds should be planted in good soil, and during cold nights the whole may be

heavily covered with fertilizer sacks. It should have a southern exposure and be well protected

from the wind. In the southern part of the state such a pit, if covered early and thoroughly on

cold nights, will generally answer all purposes, but if one could have a small glass house with

a bench along one side it would be better. The space in front and below it could be closed up

and under the shelf a small kerosene stove or lamp could be kept going during cold nights. This

would furnish bottom heat for the seeds planted on the bench and thus insure their germination.

Fairly good-sized palms are best for planting in the open ground, say from 4- or 5-inch pots.

Water well and mulch, then shelter by setting palmetto leaves around the plant so as to shade

it. In case of danger of frost, mound up around the stem to above the growing point with dry

soil and if the leaves are frozen the plant will not be seriously injured.

The following notes are drawn from experience in the cultivation of these palms in central and

southern Florida.

Acoelorraphe Wrightii grows in marl land on the southern shore of the mainland of Florida. It

forms very dense, attractive clumps 30 feet or more across.

Acrocomia. Rapid growers, and A. Totai is hardy in the southern half of Florida. It will not

grow in dry or poor soils, but thrives in rich moist lands. Like most palms, this species is

very responsive to an application of commercial fertilizer—from a pound to ten pounds according

to the size of the plant. A. media, from Porto Rico, is an exceptionally vigorous grower.

Archontophoenix, The two species, A, Cunninghamii and A. Alexandrae, which are such favorites in

the North, are among the best palms in Florida, and will, without doubt, becomes favorites in

the lower third of the state. They succeed well in shade or sunshine, on pine or hammock land,

and are fairly rapid growers, the former being somewhat the stronger plant.

Areca glandiformis is a superb, rapid-growing palm which grows well in pine land; A. triandra is

an elegant species, which should probably be grown in the shade, and the same may be said of A.

Aliceae. All are tropical.

Arenya saccharifera is a noble palm and does well in pine land.

Attalea. Prefers rich soil and if well grown makes magnificent specimens. A. Cohune succeeds

well in southern Florida, and also A. gompphococca.

Bactris. None of the species thrives in southern Florida.

Caryota. Several species are cultivated in lower Florida. Some-times the specimens do well; at

other times they fail. When in bloom they are among the most striking of palms. The ends of the

leaflets are subject to a blight which decidedly injures the growth of many specimens.

Chamaedorea. Lovely, often cespitose palms with reed-like stems. They are probably all tender,

and do well in southern Florida in sheltered, more or less shaded places.

Chamaerops. All of these do well in southern Florida and would doubtless prove hardy throughout

a large part of the state. They are slow growers, especially until they attain to considerable

size. C. humilis thrives best on high dry soils. The flowers, resembling a flat yellow fringe

from a distance, appear in March, and exhale a very strong, aromatic perfume. All produce

numerous suckers which should not be removed. Planted in small groups 10 to 15 feet apart, they

soon form very beautiful specimens which look best in the foreground of magnolias or other

taller palms. Each plant should receive a mulch of stable manure in March or April, and some

good commercial fertilizers during the rainy season.

Chrysalidocarpus lutescens is a well-known palm in the North, and in southern Florida it forms

large clumps 20 or 25 feet high.

Coccothrinax jucunda and C. Garberi are elegant, low-growing palms from the extreme southern

part of Florida and are as easily grown as the species of Thrinax.

Cocos. All species of Cocos do well in southern Florida except C. insignis and C. Weddelliana.

The common coconut, C. nucifera, save that it sometimes is injured by frost, does as well as in

many parts of the tropics and it is grown more than all other palms put together. It ripens nuts

and is becoming naturalized in Dade and Monroe counties. C. plumosa and the species of its

section are beautiful, rapid growers and all the australis section succeed admirably. The

various species are sometimes attacked by what is apparently a fungous disease appearing as

brown streaks in the young leaves. The only remedy is to pull the leaves apart and cut out the

injured young leaf back as near the growing bud as possible. This may have to be repeated once

or twice. This same disease attacks the royal palms, which may be treated in the same way. All

the species do well on high pine land, if well fertilized and watered during long dry spells.

The tall-growing, slender-stemmed species like C. plumosa, C. flexuosa, C. Romanzoffiana and C.

coronata are hardy as far north as central Florida. The species and varieties of the australis

group— C. australis. C. eriospatha, C. Datil. C. Gaertneri, C. Yatay—are better adapted to high

pine land than most palms. They soon form beautiful specimens, flower regularly when only a few

years old, and bear large bunches of edible fruit, sometimes as large as a big cherry or small

plum. The fertilizers to be used for these palms should be equally rich in ammonia, phosphoric

acid and potash. This should be applied in the months of December, January, and February. All

the old dry leaves, spathes and fruit-stems should be removed at the end of September.

Copernicia. A fine group of fan-leaved palms which is abundantly developed in Cuba,

Corypha. None of the species seems to thrive in Florida.

Daemonorops. Tender, and easily killed during cold spells in lower Florida.

Dictyosperma, Two species are grown in southern Florida, D. rubra and D, alba. Both are fine

palms and when established are strong growers and soon make bold and beautiful specimens. They

are hardier than some of the tropical species.

Elaeis, the oil-palm of tropical Africa,is grown to some extent in lower Florida and it has

produced perfect seeds. It seems to be a rank feeder and if planted in pine land should be well

fertilized.

Erythta edulis and E. armata should be hardy throughout the southern half of Florida.

Gaussia princeps grows abundantly on limestone cliffs in the mountains of Cuba, and promises to

do well also in southern Florida.

Geonoma. Species of this genus are doing moderately well in southern Florida planted in a shaded

situation in the edge of the hammock.

Hedyscepe Canterburyana is doing excellently in southern Florida and should be hardy throughout

the greater part of the state.

Howea. These palms do not seem to do well in Florida, although they should be hardy over the

southern half of the state.

Hydriastele Wendlandiana is a handsome, rapid-growing palm which promises well when planted in

partial shade in fairly good pine land. As it is a native of Queensland it is, no doubt, tender.

Hyophorbe amaricaulis and H. Verschaffeltii are strikingly ornamental, richly colored palms

which are doing fairly well in lower Florida. Both have bottle-shaped caudices.

Hyphaene Schatan has been introduced into southern Florida and does well in pine land, although

very tender. It has massive leaves with spiny-edged petioles.

Jubaea. The species grow very slowly. J. spectabilis should be hardy throughout Florida,

Latania. The latanias are among our noblest and moat beautiful palms; L. Loddigesii is very

robust and L. Commersonii, although

not so strong a grower, is very fine. They will grow in salty soil and stand salt air well, but

are tender.

Licuala. Tropical palms from the Orient which do not do well in southern Florida. L. grandis and

one or two others have succeeded for a short time, but soon die.

Livistona. Most of the species do well in southern Florida. L. chinensis and L. austrolis will

probably prove hardy as far north as latitude 27°. They require rich moist soil. L.

rotundifolia,L. altissima, L. Hoogendorpii, L. subglobosa and L. Jenkinsiana are fine tropical

species.

Martinezia caryotaefolia is cultivated in southern Florida and seems to do best in a sheltered

and partly shaded situation.

Nipa. This grows successfully in brackish marshes in southern Florida, although often destroyed

by land crabs.

Oreodoxa. The species of this genus are unsurpassed for majesty and grace by anything in the

vegetable kingdom. The common royal palm, O. regia, grows in the greatest abundance almost

everywhere throughout the island of Cuba and is universally respected and loved by the natives.

It is generally a rather slender tree, rarely over 70 feet high and, as a rule, has a swelling

somewhere along the stem. O. F. Cook considers that the species growing in the extreme lower end

of this state is distinct and has named it Roystonea floridana. It grows to a height of 100 feet

or more, the stem is not often swollen and the seeds are smaller than those of Cuban trees. Both

flourish on rich or moist soil over the lower third of the state. O. Borinquena is a stouter

species which will probably do well where the Cuban species will, while O. oleracea. is a lofty

growing species that is much tenderer. They generally do not succeed well on pine land but will

do fairly well if abundantly mulched and treated with muck, especially if they are irrigated.

Phoenix. All species and varieties of the date palm grow exceedingly well in Florida, and all

the smaller kinds growing in tufts fruit abundantly, as do also the hybrids between Pdactylifera

and P. sylvestris. They flourish equally well on pine, hammock or swamp land, even in brackish

marshes. P. dactylifera, P. canariensis and P. sylvestris are hardy in northern Florida. Hybrids

between these three are numerous. The tufted kinds like P. reclinata, P. palu-dosa. P.

farinifera and their varieties form magnificent specimens of medium size when well cared for. P.

humilis and P. Roebelenii grow best in rich moist somewhat shaded soil. For the large-growing

species like P. canariensis and P. sylvestris, and for all the large- growing palmettos (sabals)

it is necessary to make special preparations before setting them out on high pine land. Dig a

hole 6 feet deep and 6 feet wide. Old tin cans, bones, rotten oak wood should be placed at the

bottom, then stable manure mixed with clay should follow. The upper 2 feet of the hole should be

filled in with surface soil mixed with well-rotted manure. Three- or 4-foot specimens should be

set out in such places. They will grow very fast and will form beautiful specimens within a few

years. On low moist soils and in hammock woods, such preparations are not so necessary. But

wherever planted, all palms need two good applications of fertiliser each year. A good plan is

to mulch the plants in April and May with stable manure. This should be dug in around the plants

in October, and a good application of commercial fertilizer rich in potash should follow

immediately. Potash serves to harden the plants and makes them more resistant to cold.

Phytelephas macrocarpa succeeds well in southern Florida.

Pritchardia, A few species of magnificent fan-leaved palms from the South Seas, all of which are

excessively tender in Florida. They can be grown in the more tropical parts of the state in

sheltered places but are liable to have their leaves disfigured by frost.

Pseudophoenix Sargentii has been found rather abundantly on Elliott's Key, one of the

northernmost of the -lower chain. It is cultivated somewhat in southern Florida and when young

is rather attractive but when old it has exceedingly dark foliage and is rather stiff and

formal.

Ptychosperma Macarthuri is an elegant tufted palm which succeeds finely in southern Florida. It

should have partial shade and shelter and if well fertilized it soon becomes a most attractive

object.

Rhapidophyllum. This beautiful little palm is a native of northern and central Florida where it

grows on low shaded ground. The low stems are covered with a very thick spongy mass of a

peat-like substance. It is easily removed and thrives in any soil, even on high pine land. It

does not need much water or fertilizer.

Rhapis. Slender, tufted, low-growing palms which are hardy in Florida and require moist soil and

a shady place. R. humilis is the most elegant species, growing in dense clumps about 7 feet

high. R. flabelliformis is more inclined to spread.

Roscheria. Young plants of R. mclanochates do well in southern Florida, in sheltered situations.

Sabal. In good rich moist soil all the sabals grow well and soon form fine specimens. Such soils

need no special care before planting. but good applications of fertilizers are necessary, if

fine-looking and thrifty specimens are desired. All do well, however, on high dry pine land

soils if well watered and fertilized. If not well taken care of they are exceedingly slow

growers. S. Blackburnianum has immense leaves, while those of the somewhat glaucous-colored S.

mauritiaeforme are scarcely of less size. S. mexicanum resembles the native S. Palmetto. There

are a number of distinct varieties, such as S. havanensis and S. princeps. The species which do

not form a trunk, like iS. Adansonii, are only desirable for large palm collections.

Serenoa. Common on high pine lands as well as in rich hammocks. It grows in dense clumps and

when given an opportunity to grow makes a very ornamental plant.

Stevensonia grandifolia is a magnificent palm but seems to be excessively tender in Florida.

Perhaps it would succeed with protection until it attained considerable size.

Thrinax. The species of this fine genus do remarkably well in all kinds of situations and soils. They are all tropical and the beauty of the leaves is destroyed by frost. T.

Wendlandiana, T. floridana, T. microcarpa and T. keyensis are natives of the extreme southern

end of the state and are all fine. T. barbadensis and T. Morrisii are elegant species, the

latter being dwarf. The magnificent leaves of T. altissima are liable to be injured by winds if

planted in an exposed place.

Trachycarpus. These palms do not seem to thrive well in Florida, although a few specimens of T.

excelsus in the central part of the state are doing well.

Verschaffeltia also does not thrive in Florida.

Wallichia caryotoides thrives in shady positions in southern Florida.

Washingtonia. Three distinct species are grown in Florida. W. robusta is one of our finest

palms, growing rapidly and vigorously in pine land and it is used to some extent for planting

along streets and roads. W. filifera is not so handsome a tree or so rapid a grower as W.

robusta but it is doing well. W. Sonorae promises well here. Everywhere in Florida where the

soil is moist, the washingtonias grow to perfection. They will not thrive on high dry ground.

They will occasionally require good applications of fertilisers.

Chas. T. Simpson. H. Nehrling.


The above text is from the Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture. It may be out of date, but still contains valuable and interesting information which can be incorporated into the remainder of the article. Click on "Collapse" in the header to hide this text.


  1. REDIRECT Arecaceae