Archontophoenix maxima: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Archontophoenix_maxima.jpg|frame|Figure 1. <i>A. maxima</i>]]
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===Common Names: ===
===Common Names: ===
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branched.
branched.


[[File:Archontophoenix_maxima.jpg|frame|Figure 1. <i>A. maxima</i>]]
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===Distribution: ===
===Distribution: ===
Occurs in rainforest, gallery forest and wet
Occurs in rainforest, gallery forest and wet

Revision as of 10:22, 7 July 2024


Figure 1. A. maxima

Common Names:

The Walsh River Archontophoenix

Description:

Palm to 25 m tall, trunk to 30 cm in diameter and expanded at the base. Leaves 3.5 to 4 m long, ascending, held rigid, with a moderate lateral twist. Petiole is very short or absent. Crownshaft is mid-green. Pinnae are moderately grey-scaled below, held rigid with a very prominent midrib. They lack ramenta on the midrib below. The inflorescence is by far the largest of the genus, being up to 1.5 m long, with a thick peduncle to 12 cm wide; it is branched to four orders; branches are held semierect though they become pendulous in fruit. Flowers are white. Staminate flower has 11-16 stamens. Fruit is red at maturity, 13-15 mm long. Fibres in the mesocarp are thin and branched.

Distribution:

Occurs in rainforest, gallery forest and wet sclerophyll forest at 800-1200 m altitude, on the Walsh River and its tributaries, western Atherton Tablelands [17&deg 20'S], and nearby Mt Haig Range in the central Atherton Tableland, Queensland.

Notes:

This is the largest species in the genus. It has a massive inflorescence and ascending, rigid leaves with a short or absent petiole. Flower characteristics most closely resemble A. alexandrae.

Contributed by:

John Dowe (Text - from Palms & Cycads No. 39, Apr-Jun 1993).
Luke Nancarrow (Figure 1)

External Links:

Kew, PalmWeb, JSTOR, Trebrown, ATRP

Google, GoogleImages, Flickr, PalmTalk