Attalea cohune: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Attalea_cohune.jpg|frame|Figure 1. ''A. cohune'' in habitat, Mexico.]]
[[File:Attalea_cohune.jpg|frame|Figure 1. ''A. cohune'' in habitat, Mexico.]]
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Revision as of 14:02, 20 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. A. cohune in habitat, Mexico.

Common Names:

Cohune Palm

Habitat:

Central American rainforest.

Description:

A massive palm, featuring extremely long leaves (up to 10m), held almost upright, with the dark green leaflets hanging down, (hence the occasionally used term "rain tree"). These leaves, combined with a trunk that can reach 15m, results in a rather impressive plant.

General:

The large, oval-shaped fruit is harvested commercially to produce cohune oil, a lubricant.

Culture:

A very slow growing plant, best suited to the tropics, or a sheltered warm spot in the sub-tropics, it is none the less quite popular with collectors because of its majestic appearance.

Figure 2. A. cohune in cleared tropical deciduous forest in Nayarit State, Mexico.
Figure 3. A. cohune in habitat, Mexico.
Figure 4. A. cohune inflorescences.

Contributed by:

Bob Lauri (Figure 1,2&3)


External Links:

Kew, PalmWeb, JSTOR, Trebrown

Google, GoogleImages, Flickr, PalmTalk