Acoelorrhaphe wrightii: Difference between revisions

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<div class="small-0 large-10 columns">[[File:Acoelorrhaphe_wrightii.jpg|frame|Figure 1. <i>Acoelorrhaphe wrightii</i> showing the silvery, fan shaped leaves]]
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<div class="small-0 large-10 columns">[[File:Acoelorrhaphe_wrightii.jpg|frame|Figure 1. <i>Acoelorrhaphe wrightii</i> showing the silvery, fan shaped leaves]]</div>
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===Synonyms:===
===Synonyms:===
<i>Paurotis wrightii</i>, <br/>
<i>Paurotis wrightii</i>, <br/>

Revision as of 13:55, 25 May 2024

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Figure 1. Acoelorrhaphe wrightii showing the silvery, fan shaped leaves

Synonyms:

Paurotis wrightii,
P. androsana,
Acanthosabal caespitosa

Common Names:

Paurotis Palm,
Silver Saw Palmetto,
Everglades Palm

Habitat:

Moist, sandy soil, often swamps (usually coastal), around the Caribbean coast from Florida to the West Indies.

Description:

A very attractive clumping plant, with distinctive silvery fan leaves, and a fibrous sheath around the trunk. If given the right conditions, (sun, water, and warmth) it can form a very large clump, several metres across, and up to about 5 metres high.

General:

This is a very ornamental plant, and quite a quick grower, but because of the size that it can reach, it is usually best planted in open spaces (unless you're quite handy with a pruning saw to lop out the occasional trunk).

Culture:

Full sun, and lots of water (likes to be able to get into ground water). Also reasonably cold tolerant.

Figure 2. Acoelorrhaphe wrightii stem detail


Contributed by:

University of Florida-IFAS (Figures 1&2)

External Links:

[[1]], [[2]], [[3]], [[4]], [[5]], [[6]]

[[7]],

[Images], [[8]], [Forums], [[9]] [Category:Acoelorrhaphe|wrightii]