Chamaerops humilis: Difference between revisions

From PACSOA Wiki

P>Pacsoa
No edit summary
 
No edit summary
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 41: Line 41:
===Contributed by: ===
===Contributed by: ===
Rolf Kyburz (Figure 1&2)<br/>
Rolf Kyburz (Figure 1&2)<br/>
Antonius Verhoeven, '''[[https://www.globalpalms.com/ Global Palms]]''' (Figure 3)
Antonius Verhoeven, '''[https://www.globalpalms.com/ Global Palms]''' (Figure 3)




Line 57: Line 57:
<p>
<p>
[[Category:Chamaerops|humilis]]
[[Category:Chamaerops|humilis]]
[[Category:Palm|Chamaerops_humilis]]    
[[Category:Palm|Chamaerops_humilis]]

Latest revision as of 12:22, 29 July 2024

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. C. humilis

Common Names:[edit]

Dwarf Fan Palm,
European Fan Palm,
Mediterranean Fan Palm

Distribution & Habitat:[edit]

Rocky headlands and low hills around the Mediterranean coast. Its range extends from Africa's Atlas Mountains in Morocco to Spain and France and eastward to Turkey (see humilis in Sicily).

Description:[edit]

A very variable species, usually clumping, however, also occasionally single trunked, to about 3m high. Small, palmate leaves, to about 50cm across, at the end of a heavily spined petiole.

Culture:[edit]

Prefers full sun in a very well drained position. Not suited to the true tropics, but will thrive in a sub-tropical climate with a good dry season. One of the most cold tolerant palm species, withstanding even heavy frosts, so it is very popular in Europe, and the USA. Quite slow growing. A very good container plant.

Figure 2. C. humilis leaf close-up.
Figure 3. A very ancient C. humilis in habitat, Morocco.

Contributed by:[edit]

Rolf Kyburz (Figure 1&2)
Antonius Verhoeven, Global Palms (Figure 3)


External Links:[edit]

Kew, PalmWeb, JSTOR, Trebrown, Wikipedia Images

Google, GoogleImages, Flickr, PalmTalk