Howea belmoreana: Difference between revisions
From PACSOA Wiki
m (1 revision imported) |
m (1 revision imported) |
||
| Line 20: | Line 20: | ||
with evenly spaced, dark green, adaxially angled leaflets | with evenly spaced, dark green, adaxially angled leaflets | ||
which give it an angular appearance. | which give it an angular appearance. | ||
Quite similar in appearance to '' | Quite similar in appearance to ''[[Howea_forsteriana]]'' but | ||
hybridization is very exceptional although there are a few | hybridization is very exceptional although there are a few | ||
palms growing on Lord Howe Island which produce seed | palms growing on Lord Howe Island which produce seed | ||
Revision as of 13:28, 6 August 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. |
Common Names:
Curly palm,
Sentry palm
Conservation Status:
Not threatened
Distribution & Habitat:
Mountainous forest on Lord Howe Island.
Description:
A medium sized solitary pinnate palm to about 10m tall, with evenly spaced, dark green, adaxially angled leaflets which give it an angular appearance. Quite similar in appearance to Howea_forsteriana but hybridization is very exceptional although there are a few palms growing on Lord Howe Island which produce seed productive of both the Howeas.
Culture:
This is a very adaptable palm, and it will thrive in positions from very low light indoors thru to full sun. It prefers a temperate thru to sub-topical climate, not being at all happy in the tropics. And it likes the standard moist, but well drained soil. Its seeds take 2 years to fully ripen. It deteriorates more rapidly when grown as a pot plant and is more susceptible to mites than H. forsteriana is. It also grows comparatively slowly. For all these reasons, H. forsteriana is the commercially preferred plant.
Contributed by:
John and Jean Price (Figure 1) (from Palms & Cycads No. 57, Oct-Dec 1997).
Jo Wilkins (Figure 2&3)
External Links:
Kew, PalmWeb, eMonocot, JSTOR, Trebrown
Google, GoogleImages, Flickr, PalmTalk



