Coccothrinax

Sargent

Botanical Gazette 27: 87. 1899.

Common names: Silver palm
Etymology: Greek coccos, berry, and thrinax, trident or winnowing fork
Synonyms: Haitiella L. H. Bailey Thrincoma O. F. Cook Thringis O. F. Cook
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 22. Treatment on page 99. Mentioned on page 100.
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 TaxonIllustrator 
FNA22 P18 Thrinax Coccothrinax Rhapidophyllum pg 99.jpegCoccothrinax argentata
Thrinax morrisii
Rhapidophyllum hystrix

Plants small to moderate. Stems solitary or occasionally caespitose, erect, slender, at first covered with leaf-sheaths. Leaves: sheath fibers soft, netlike, eventually sloughing off to reveal smooth to fissured stem; petiole not split at base, unarmed; abaxial hastula a low ridge or absent; adaxial hastula a crescent-shaped ridge to semicylindric excrescence; blade palmate; plication induplicatee (V-shaped); segments lanceolate, basally connate; cross-veins obscure [conspicuous]. Inflores cences interfoliar, downcurved [long and arching], not extending beyond leaves, with 2 orders of branching; prophyll short, peduncular bracts several, sterile, tubular, distally expanded, silky-pubescent; primary branches subtended by smaller peduncular bracts. Flowers bisexual, borne singly along rachillae, short-pedicellate; perianth 1-seriate, shallowly cupulate, lobes 5–7, apiculate; stamens 7–12; filaments acute; anthers dorsifixed, twisted when dry; pistils 1, 1-carpellate, glabrous; style slender; stigma funnelform. Fruits globose; stigmatic scar apical; exocarp purplish, smooth, slightly warty when dry; mesocarp fleshy; endocarp membranaceous. Seeds globose, irregularly brain-shaped; endosperm homogeneous, bony; embryo apical [superior]; eophyll undivided, lanceolate.

Distribution

Caribbean Basin

Discussion

Coccothrinax shares a similar floral morphology with Thrinax, and like Thrinax it is wind pollinated. Fruits of C. argentata are one of the most important foods of Florida’s Key deer (W. D. Klimstra and A. L. Dooley 1990), but seeds are not excreted intact (W. D. Klimstra, pers. comm.).

Coccothrinax includes a great number of species with ornamental potential, and many of the cultivated ones are discussed by C. E. Nauman and R. W. Sanders (1991). Because of their generally small and slender stature and their predictable growth form, they make elegant horticultural subjects.

Theis genus is in dire need of systematic study.

Species 14–50 (1 in the flora).

... more about "Coccothrinax"
dorsifixed +
Scott Zona +
Sargent +
Silver palm +
Caribbean Basin +
membranaceous +
lanceolate +
Greek coccos, berry, and thrinax, trident or winnowing fork +
semicylindric +
adnate +, connate +  and distinct +
short-pedicellate +
adnate +, connate +  and distinct +
berrylike +  and drupaceous +
apical +  and basal +
globose +
branched +  and spicate +
2-pinnate +  and pinnate +
5 (?) +  and 7 (?) +
connate +  and distinct +
bearing prickles or marginal teeth +  and unarmed +
ridged +, channeled +  and terete +
list +  and count +
v--shaped +  and tent--shaped +
germination +
Botanical Gazette +
nauman1990a +  and nauman1991a +
crescent--shaped +
adventitious +
adhering to endocarp +  and free +
brain--shaped +  and globose +
bearing prickles +  and unarmed +
lanceolate +
connate +  and distinct +
7 +  and 12 +
covered with fibrous or prickly remains +  and smooth +
caespitose +  and solitary +
subterranean +
smooth;fissured +
slender +
connate +  and distinct +
slender +
Haitiella +, Thrincoma +  and Thringis +
Coccothrinax +
Arecaceae (tribe Corypheae) subtribe Thrinacinae +
unbranched +  and branched +
unisexual +  and bisexual +
small +  and moderate +