Howea belmoreana
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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



