Roystonea

O. F. Cook

Science ser. 2, 12:479. 1900.

Common names: Royal palm palm palmier royal
Etymology: for Roy Stone, 1836–1905
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 22. Treatment on page 116. Mentioned on page 117.
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 TaxonIllustrator 
FNA22 P22 Dypsis Roystonia Ptychosperma pg 116.jpegRoystonea regia
Dypsis lutescens
Ptychosperma macarthurii

Stems solitary, erect, greater than 20 cm in diam., smooth, unarmed. Leaves: leaf-bases unarmed, forming crownshaft, crownshaft prominent, green, smooth; petiole unarmed; blade pinnate; plication reduplicate; segments linear-lanceolate, in more than 1 plane. Inflorescences axillary below crown of leaves, paniculate, with 2 or 3 orders of branching; prophyll tubular; peduncular bract greatly exceeding prophyll, leathery, splitting longitudinally on abaxial side and circumscissilly at base; rachillae covered with copious caducous dendritic trichomes, becoming glabrous. Flowers unisexual, sessile, in triads of 1 pistillate flower flanked by 2 staminate flowers. Staminate flowers: sepals 3, imbricate, membranaceous; petals 3, valvate; stamens 6 (–10, rarely); anthers dorsifixed, often twisting upon drying; pistillode minute, obscurely 3-cleft. Pistillate flowers globose to conic; sepals 3, imbricate; petals 3, basally connate, distally valvate; staminodes 6, basally connate, adnate to corolla basally; pistil 1; ovules 1; style indistinct; stigmas 3. Fruits drupes, fibrous; stigmatic scar basal; exocarp ripening from green to red to purplish black at maturity, thin, leathery; mesocarp fleshy, oily; endocarp hard. Seeds 1, nearly globose [obovoid], dorsiventrally compressed, abaxially attached to endocarp; endosperm homogeneous; embryo basal; eophyll undivided, linear-lanceolate. x n = 18.

Distribution

Fla., Mexico, West Indies, Central America, South America

Discussion

Most species of Roystonea are widely known as royal palms. They are cultivated worldwide and are especially favored as avenue trees. Long rows of gray-white columnar trunks are unmatched for their magnificence and stateliness. In some parts of the Caribbean, especially Cuba, Roystonea is a significant resource for thatch (leafbases only), timber, livestock feed, palmito (palm cabbage or heart-of-palm), and edible oil (F. A. Reynoso 1976; C. Ruebens 1968; T. A. Zanoni 1991; S. Zona 1991, 1996).

Species 11 (1 in the flora).

Lower Taxa

... more about "Roystonea"
dorsifixed +
Scott Zona +
O. F. Cook +
Royal palm palm +  and palmier royal +
Fla. +, Mexico +, West Indies +, Central America +  and South America +
linear-lanceolate +
for Roy Stone, 1836–1905 +
green +  and red +
adnate +, connate +  and distinct +
pistillate +, staminate +  and sessile +
adnate +, connate +  and distinct +
2 +  and 1 +
globose;conic +
berrylike +  and drupaceous +
apical +  and basal +
branched +  and spicate +
2-pinnate +  and pinnate +
ridged +, channeled +  and terete +
list +  and count +
v--shaped +  and tent--shaped +
germination +
cook1936a +, reynoso1976a +, ruebens1968a +, small1937a +, zanoni1991a +, zona1991a +  and zona1996a +
adventitious +
adhering to endocarp +  and free +
compressed +  and globose +
bearing prickles +  and unarmed +
linear-lanceolate +
connate +  and distinct +
membranaceous +
adnate +  and connate +
subterranean +
enlarged;massive;slender +
connate +  and distinct +
Palmae +
Roystonea +
Arecaceae (tribe Areceae) subtribe Roystoneinae +
unbranched +  and branched +
plant +, shrub +  and tree +
unisexual +  and bisexual +