Difference between revisions of "Voanioala gerardii"

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This species is thought perhaps to have been the ancestor of the coconut that we know today. Even though the nut only measures about 5 cm x 7 cm and weighs approximately 100 - 120 grams, the close relationship with the modern coconut, Cocos nucifera, can be observed in the similarities of the arrangement of the inflorescences and in the physical structure of the fruits (nuts). One feature of this palm is the large number of chromosomes its cells contain, at around 600 this is the largest number ever recorded for a monocotyledon.
 
This species is thought perhaps to have been the ancestor of the coconut that we know today. Even though the nut only measures about 5 cm x 7 cm and weighs approximately 100 - 120 grams, the close relationship with the modern coconut, Cocos nucifera, can be observed in the similarities of the arrangement of the inflorescences and in the physical structure of the fruits (nuts). One feature of this palm is the large number of chromosomes its cells contain, at around 600 this is the largest number ever recorded for a monocotyledon.
  
"A very slow and VERY rare palm from Madagascar. It seems to be the closest relative to the modern coconut, but has an unbelievably large number of chromosomes (so hybridization with the coconut is not likely). Seed has been banned from exportation for some time now, so it is increasingly hard to acquire a specimen. It appears to have a little more cold tolerance than the coconut (though not the cool tolerance that would be needed to grow it in California), but there's no way I'm going to put either of mine through less than 40F. The grower who had them before me got down to 29F and they don't have any damage, so I think the hardiness thing may be true, but they wouldn't recover from damage as fast as a coconut can. For me they are one of my slowest palms, growing at about the speed of a Howea forsteriana (sending out maybe 2-3 leaves per year in optimal conditions), so don't expect this palm to rocket towards the sky like it's coconut relative. The largest one currently appears to be the one at the Sullivan garden in Hawaii, which is maybe 8-10 feet overall. If you grow one and live to see it set seed, consider yourself a lucky person. It's a beautiful adult however, looking like an extra lush coconut with notches on it's trunk (hard to describe, I'll upload a picture), so I think that the negatives pale in comparison to the possible positives of having an adult plant." (Keith)
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"A very slow and VERY rare palm from Madagascar. It seems to be the closest relative to the modern coconut, but has an unbelievably large number of chromosomes (so hybridization with the coconut is not likely). Seed has been banned from exportation for some time now, so it is increasingly hard to acquire a specimen. It appears to have a little more cold tolerance than the coconut (though not the cool tolerance that would be needed to grow it in California), but there's no way I'm going to put either of mine through less than 40F. The grower who had them before me got down to 29F and they don't have any damage, so I think the hardiness thing may be true, but they wouldn't recover from damage as fast as a coconut can. For me they are one of my slowest palms, growing at about the speed of a Howea forsteriana (sending out maybe 2-3 leaves per year in optimal conditions), so don't expect this palm to rocket towards the sky like it's coconut relative. The largest one currently appears to be the one at the Sullivan garden in Hawaii, which is maybe 8-10 feet overall. If you grow one and live to see it set seed, consider yourself a lucky person. It's a beautiful adult however, looking like an extra lush coconut with notches on it's trunk (hard to describe, I'll upload a picture), so I think that the negatives pale in comparison to the possible positives of having an adult plant." (Keith Zimmerman)
 
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image:DoublecocoVGclarkz.jpg|SoCal. Photo by Clark, edric.
 
image:DoublecocoVGclarkz.jpg|SoCal. Photo by Clark, edric.
 
image:TimIMG_0196.jpg|Hawaii. Photo by Tim, edric.
 
image:TimIMG_0196.jpg|Hawaii. Photo by Tim, edric.
image:KeithDSC01967.jpg|Photo by Keith, edric.
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image:KeithDSC01967.jpg|Photo by Keith Zimmerman, edric.
 
image:84403a18-01d8-4864-9f1a-bc316039659az.jpg
 
image:84403a18-01d8-4864-9f1a-bc316039659az.jpg
 
image:194c8917-f1f6-4ee8-b16b-c3367623cd93z.jpg|Thick Endocarp, Antalavia, Masoala, Madagascar. Photo by Dr. Andrew McRobb, edric.
 
image:194c8917-f1f6-4ee8-b16b-c3367623cd93z.jpg|Thick Endocarp, Antalavia, Masoala, Madagascar. Photo by Dr. Andrew McRobb, edric.
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File:8e72a2.jpg|Hawaii. Lundkvist Nursery. Photo by Geoff Stein, edric.
 
File:8e72a2.jpg|Hawaii. Lundkvist Nursery. Photo by Geoff Stein, edric.
 
File:81bc65.jpg|Hawaii. Piercy garden. Photo by Geoff Stein, edric.
 
File:81bc65.jpg|Hawaii. Piercy garden. Photo by Geoff Stein, edric.
File:268dff.jpg|Hawaii. Sullivan Garden. Photo by Keith, edric.
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File:268dff.jpg|Hawaii. Sullivan Garden. Photo by Keith Zimmerman, edric.
  
  

Revision as of 03:39, 15 September 2014

Voanioala
(voh-ah-nee-oh-AHL-ah)
gerardii (jehr-AHRD-ee)
Voanioalajorgez.jpg
Madagascar. Photo by Jörg Schumann, Thirnax Palms & Cycads, (I got all those fresh Madfox seeds from him) edric.
Scientific Classification
Genus: Voanioala
(voh-ah-nee-oh-AHL-ah)
Species:
gerardii (jehr-AHRD-ee)
Synonyms
None set.
Native Continent
Africa
Africa.gif
Morphology
Habit: Solitary
Leaf type: Pinnate
Culture
Survivability index
Common names
(Forest coconut, Betsimisaraka).

Habitat and Distribution

Voanioala gerardii is Endemic to Madagascar, Masoala Peninsula. Primary forest rich in palms and pandans in swampy valley bottom and on gentle slopes at about 400 m. alt.

Antalavia, Masoala, Madagascar. Photo by Dr. John Dransfield, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew/Palmweb.

Description

Very large feather palm, up to 20 m tall, closely resembling a coconut palm. It is anchored by a large root base. The trunk is characteristically 'stepped' and the feather-shaped leaves extending from the crown may reach up to 5 metres long. The waxy, green leaflets are fairly stiff, and around 70 are found on either side of the axis of each leaf. The fruits of this species are a rich red-brown colour when ripe and grow in thick bunches at the crown. It produces large bunches of reddish brown fruit.

Robust solitary, monoecious, palm. TRUNK 15-20 m tall, basally with a large root boss to about 1 m in diam., about 35 to 40 cm in diam. head high, distally the stem bare, very conspicuously "stepped" and ringed with oblique leaf scars about 10 cm distant, the distal part of the internode projecting about 5 cm outwards from the proximal part of the following internode. LEAVES about 15-20 in the crown, about 5 m long, cleanly abscising; leafsheath tubular at first, fibrous, apparently soon disintegrating to leave a massive elongate rectangular leaf base, forming an apparent petiole about 150 x 30 cm, about 8-10 cm thick, with sparsely fibrous margins, abaxially densely covered with caducous brown indumentum; leaf base suddenly contracting into rachis, true petiole absent, the rachis ; ± rectangular in cross section in the mid-leaf region, 4 x 3 cm, abaxially densely covered with caducous brown indumentum as the leaf base; leaflets about 70 on each side of the rachis, regularly arranged, rather stiff, scarcely pendulous, very coriaceous, concolorous, shining mid green when fresh, drying pale, mid-leaf leaflets about 150 x 7 cm, unevenly bilobed at the tips, mid vein prominent adaxially, abaxially bearing a few brown ramenta near the base, about 8 longitudinal veins besides the mid vein, transverse veinlets obscure but lamina minutely transversely striate, portion of leaflet exposed in the sword leaf bearing caducous chocolate scales, thin wax also present on both surfaces. INFLORESCENCES to about 1.5 cm long, interfoliar, erect in bud, later horizontal; peduncle about 90 cm long, circular in cross section, 4-5 cm in diam., pale cream-coloured at anthesis, becoming green in fruit, brown scaly when newly emerged; prophyll tubular, 2 keeled, about 70 x 13 cm, fibrous, remaining hidden among the leaf bases, bearing caducous brown scales; peduncular bract about 120 x 18 cm, bright green and strictly tubular in bud, later splitting longitudinally, flattening and becoming somewhat cowl-like, abaxially deeply and closely longitudinally grooved, bearing scattered brown scales on the ridges between the grooves, adaxially smooth, glabrous, pale cream-coloured; rachis about 60 cm long; rachillae about 60, those near the base longest, to about 50 cm, decreasing in length towards tip of inflorescence, most with a basal bare portion 2-5 cm long, about 7 mm in diam. near the base, decreasing to 1.5 mm in diam. near the tip, the rachillae bearing 0-7 triads near the base and paired or solitary staminate flowers distally, the flower groups spirally arranged, or becoming somewhat distichous by close-packing, about 5-10 mm apart. STAMINATE FLOWERS asymmetrical, broadly or narrowly triangular in outline, about 10-12 x 7-9 mm, creamy-yellow just before anthesis, the whole inflorescence smelling sweetly; sepals about 3-4 x 4 mm, distinct, slightly to strongly imbricate at the base, triangular, acute to acuminate, membranous, glabrous; petals 9-19 x 3-6 mm., unequal, glabrous, thinly coriaceous except at the thick angular tips, broadly and irregularly triangular-ovate, with acute or acuminate tips, abaxially smooth, adaxially marked with the impressions of the stamens and papillose near the thick tips; stamens with filaments subulate, 0.5-2.5 x 0.1 mm, anthers 9 x 1 mm, basifixed, basally sagittate, apiculate at the tips, latrorse. PISTILLATE FLOWERS only known as buds, irregularly triangular, about 18 x 10 mm; sepals 8-12 x 10 mm, unequal, strongly imbricate, broadly ovate, with triangular, keeled tips, coriaceous, glabrous, the margins minutely toothed; petals 15 x 8 mm, basally irregularly imbricate, conspicuously valvate at the triangular tips, abaxially with scaly indumentum towards the apex, adaxially strongly papillose towards the tip; staminodial ring about 1.2 mm high with 9 irregular, triangular teeth, 0.1-0.5 mm; gynoecium about 4 mm in diam. FRUIT green when immature, turning rich red-brown when ripe, 7-8 x 4-5 cm, covered with dense chestnut-brown scaly indumentum, one-seeded, somewhat irregularly ellipsoid, tipped with a short beak and stigmatic remains; epicarp purplish-brown, densely covered with brown scaly indumentum; mesocarp with an outer fibrous zone just below the epicarp, and an inner fleshy zone; endocarp ellipsoid, apically pointed, basally truncate, very heavily thickened, pale brown when fresh, becoming grey with age, very deeply and irregularly longitudinally grooved, with 3 very deep basal impressions each with a central germination pore, in section the body of the endocarp traversed by longitudinal irregular vertical canals and fibres, inner surface of the endocarp with numerous irregular rounded excrescences intruding into the cavity. SEED irregularly ellipsoid, 4 x 2 cm, filling the endocarp cavity, laterally attached with a narrow irregular hilum, endosperm homogeneous but irregularly intruded by the endocarp protruberances, very hard, white, with a narrow, irregular central lacuna. EOPHYLL and leaf 2 entire, lanceolate, about 30 x 7 cm, leaves 3 and 4 bifid. (J. Dransfield and H. Beentje. 1995)/Palmweb. Editing by edric.

Culture

Warm, moist, well drained position. Slow growing, but it developes long tap roots fast, care the opposite of say, Dypsis, and requires a rather large pot soon, instead of spending 3 years in a 4 inch pot. Requires filtered light to look it's best when young, does not do well in CA. This is an emergent palm.

Cold Hardiness Zone: 10a

Comments and Curiosities

External Links

References

Phonetic spelling of Latin names by edric.

Special thanks to Geoff Stein, (Palmbob) for his hundreds of photos.

Special thanks to Palmweb.org, Dr. John Dransfield, Dr. Bill Baker & team, for their volumes of information and photos.

Glossary of Palm Terms; Based on the glossary in Dransfield, J., N.W. Uhl, C.B. Asmussen-Lange, W.J. Baker, M.M. Harley & C.E. Lewis. 2008. Genera Palmarum - Evolution and Classification of the Palms. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. All images copyright of the artists and photographers (see images for credits).

Dransfield, J. & Beentje, H. 1995. The Palms of Madagascar. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and The International Palm Society.
Many Special Thanks to Ed Vaile for his long hours of tireless editing and numerous contributions.

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