Bowenia spectabilis

From PACSOA Wiki

Welcome to the PACSOA Palms and Cycads wiki!

If you have any information about this species, please help by updating this article. Once you are registered you can contribute, change, or correct the text, and even add photos on this page. Click on the edit tab above and play around. Any mistake can be easily corrected, so don't be afraid.

Figure 1. Bowenia spectabilis

Common Names:[edit]

Zamia Fern

Distribution & Habitat:[edit]

Found in and around open rainforest in north-eastern Queensland, on the coast and ranges from Cardwell to Cooktown, with an outlying occurrence in the McIlraith Range.

Description:[edit]

Very similar in appearance to Bowenia serrulata, however this plant has smooth, rather than serrated edges to the leaves. The leaves stand up straight from the underground tuber, up to 1.5 metres (5 feet) high, and are branched, usually having about 7 branches on a mature leaf. The individual leaflets, arranged bipinnately around the stem, are usually between 60 to 100mm (2.5-4ins) long, 20-30mm (0.75-1.25ins) wide and are a dark, shiny green, with smooth edges. They have the standard pineapple shaped cone, producing green/purple, oval seeds, 30mm (2.25in) long.

Culture:[edit]

These are forest plants, so require filtered sun, and a moist, well drained soil, with high humidity. Not as commonly grown as B. serrulata, however they still make an very nice feature plant in a shady situation and are also very good pot plants. Usually grown from seed, pressed halfway into the mix, but larger plants can also be divided to give several smaller plants.

Figure 2. B. spectabilis in the Daintree rainforest.
Figure 3. B. spectabilis in Flecker Botanical Garden, Cairns.
Figure 4. B. spectabilis male cones.

Contributed by:[edit]

Mike Gray (Text)
Lyle Arnold (Figures 2&3)
Paul Kennedy (Figure 4)


External Links:[edit]

IUCN, JSTOR, Trebrown,

Google, GoogleImages, Flickr,