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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69783 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69783)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of A synopsis of the palms of Puerto
-Rico, by O. F. Cook
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: A synopsis of the palms of Puerto Rico
-
-Author: O. F. Cook
-
-Release Date: January 14, 2023 [eBook #69783]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from
- images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A SYNOPSIS OF THE PALMS OF
-PUERTO RICO ***
-
-
-
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- A Synopsis of the Palms of Puerto Rico.
-
-
- BY O. F. COOK.
-
-
- [Reprinted from the BULLETIN OF THE TORREY BOTANICAL CLUB, 28. Oct.,
- 1901.]
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- A Synopsis of the Palms of Puerto Rico
-
- BY O. F. COOK
-
- (WITH PLATES 43–48)
-
-
-The following systematic notes have been accumulated in connection with
-economic studies of Puerto Rico[1] palms, and although the list is
-doubtless still incomplete, the printing of it may be justified as a
-means of securing at least provisional names needed for reference
-purposes in connection with other publications of a non-systematic
-character.
-
-The palms may well be considered a very refractory group when handled by
-the conventional methods of systematic botany. Difficult at once to
-collect or to study from dried material, they are commonly neglected
-both in the field and in the herbarium, with the result that literature
-is scanty and unsatisfactory. A very large proportion of the
-descriptions are entirely inadequate for the identification of species,
-and there has been much lawlessness and diversity in the application of
-generic names, as will appear from some of the instances discussed
-below. Difficulties of description and classification have also been
-multiplied by the fact that the palms are such peculiar plants that
-analogies and criteria borrowed from other families are often
-inapplicable and misleading. Moreover, the terminology of parts and
-characters has not been developed to the point where the expression of
-observed differences is easy, and available language often fails
-completely to suggest the significance of the characters used. Thus the
-fibers into which parts of the leaf-bases of many palms are resolved
-afford many diagnostic characters, for which we have no parallels in
-other groups of plants.
-
-A compensating advantage may be drawn, however, from the definite and
-often very limited geographical distribution of the species of palms.
-Thus, although Puerto Rico is a relatively small island, several of the
-indigenous palms have apparently ranged in nature over but a small part
-of it, and a locality definitely indicated would often go further toward
-establishing the identity of a species than much of the descriptive
-matter prepared for this purpose. For the present, at least, the
-geographical idea should be kept uppermost in systematic studies of the
-palms, since it is generally much easier and far more logical to extend
-the limits of supposed distribution and unite supposed species, than to
-cope with the confusion caused by the miscellaneous reporting of species
-far outside their natural ranges.
-
-From the popular standpoint another serious inconvenience of the
-systematic literature of palms arises from the fact that it is based so
-largely on floral characters that even the botanical traveler might need
-to wait months for the blossoms and then climb the trees or cut them
-down before being able to secure a clue to botanical names or
-relationships. But however necessary refinements of formal characters
-may be in presenting classifications or monographs of large groups, more
-obvious differences may still be adequate for distinguishing between the
-species, genera and families represented in a limited flora like that of
-Puerto Rico. In the present paper use is made therefore of obvious
-external differences, not only because of the greater convenience and
-utility of such facts in field study but also in the belief that with
-the palms, at least, the vegetative, habitat and ecological features are
-often quite as important for diagnostic purposes as the more technical
-and conventionalized characters to which botanists are accustomed in
-dealing with other natural orders.
-
-As will be apparent from some of the following systematic notes, the
-generic nomenclature of the palms is in a condition closely comparable
-to that now known to obtain among the myxomycetes, fungi, hepaticae and
-ferns. Possibly the palms have suffered more from neglect and
-carelessness than other groups of flowering plants, but it can no longer
-be maintained that the practical defects of former taxonomic methods do
-not exist in the phanerogams as well as in the cryptogams, and it
-becomes obvious that the enactment of different nomenclatorial
-legislation for these two subdivisions of the vegetable kingdom would be
-unreasonable and inconsistent.
-
-The present list records twenty palms from Puerto Rico, of which three
-are introduced and seventeen are supposed to be native species. As may
-also be inferred from many other groups of plants Puerto Rico appears to
-be a rather remote corner of the Antillean region, which many types
-present in Cuba and Jamaica did not reach, whether by reason of greater
-distance from the continent or because of an earlier interruption of
-land communication. The native palms of Puerto Rico may thus be said to
-represent a distinctly Antillean or Caribbean series, only _Acrocomia_
-and _Bactris_ being known to have a wider distribution.
-
-The list of introduced palms, consisting of the date, the cocoanut, and
-the betel, might have been somewhat increased by canvassing ornamental
-gardens, but it does not appear that any other introduced species has
-been put to any useful purpose or has escaped into general culture,
-certainly a remarkable fact when we consider the number and importance
-of the economic palms of other tropical countries.
-
-Finally, it may be well to note here that several palms have been
-reported from Puerto Rico which probably do not exist in the island; at
-least their occurrence is not supported by adequate evidence. Thus Mr.
-R. T. Hill, of the United States Geological Survey, mentions (Bull. U.
-S. Dept. Agric., Division of Forestry, 25: 1899) as occurring in Puerto
-Rico seven palms, as follows: _Cocos Mauritia_, _Oreodoxa oleracea_,
-_Cocos nucifera_, _Martinezia caryotaefolia_, _Mauritia flexuosa_,
-_Oreodoxa regia_, and _Caryota_ sp., of which list only _Cocos nucifera_
-and _Oreodoxa regia_ appear to have been justified.
-
-The reference to _Oreodoxa oleracea_ is supported by the botanical
-authority of Professor Drude, but the specimens identified by him as
-_Oreodoxa oleracea_ (Sintenis collection, no. 1525) and sent from the
-Berlin Botanical Garden to the National Herbarium and to the New York
-Botanical Garden are not _Oreodoxa oleracea_, but belong to the new
-genus _Acrista_ described below, while a specimen collected by Sintenis
-(no. 5749) at Aguadilla and sent out from Berlin as an _Attalea_ or
-related genus is not even a cocoid palm but _Areca catechu_, the betel
-nut of the Malay region.
-
-The existence of numerous tubercles on the roots of a young specimen of
-the royal palm of Puerto Rico is a fact of biological interest and
-possible economic importance. It was, however, noted so nearly at the
-end of our last visit that further studies were not practicable, but
-barring possible nematodes or other pathological causes for the
-tubercles it appears that we must add palms to the Leguminosae,
-_Podocarpus_, _Alnus_, and _Cycas_ as plants which have, as it were,
-domesticated nitrogen-collecting soil organisms.
-
-The field notes, specimens and a considerable series of illustrations
-for publications of the Department of Agriculture were secured during
-two visits to Puerto Rico, the first in November and December, 1899, the
-second in June and July, 1901. The photographs are the work of Mr. G. N.
-Collins.
-
-
- Key to the Families
-
- Leaves fan-shaped; branches of inflorescence subtended by spathes.
-
- Family SABALACEAE, p. 529.
-
- Leaves feather-shaped; spathes few, not subtending the branches of the
- inflorescence.
-
- Leaf-divisions v-shaped in section, concave above; trunk rough
- with leaf-bases or prominent diamond shaped scars.
-
- Family PHOENICACEAE, p. 528.
-
- Leaf-divisions inverted v-shaped in section, convex above; trunk
- smooth or the leaf-scars ring-like and not prominent.
-
- Leaf-bases long-sheathing, green and fleshy, finally split down
- the side opposite the midrib permitting the leaf to fall;
- fruits with fleshy, fibrous or woody endocarps.
-
- Family ARECACEAE, p. 546.
-
- Leaf-bases sheathing only while young, with maturity separating,
- except at the midrib, into a dry fibrous network which must
- tear or decay before the leaves fall; fruits with a stony
- endocarp perforated by three foramina.
-
- Family COCACEAE, p. 558.
-
-
- Family PHOENICACEAE
-
-This family contains a single genus of old-world palms usually
-associated with the fan-leaved series, and differing from all other
-feather-palms by having the concave side of the leaf segments turned
-upward.
-
-
- PHOENIX DACTYLIFERA Linn. Sp. Pl. 1188. 1753
-
-The date palm was probably introduced into Puerto Rico in the early part
-of the Spanish occupation of the island, and isolated trees are to be
-found in many localities especially in the vicinity of the larger towns.
-The climate is, however, too cool and too moist to permit the fruit to
-ripen properly, and there is apparently no inducement for planting in
-large quantities.
-
-
- Family SABALACEAE
-
-Although forming no conspicuous part of the palm vegetation of the
-island the fan-leaved species seem to be more numerous than those of any
-other family. It is certain also that further species remain to be
-discovered, since in addition to the species listed below, young
-inflorescences supposed to belong to a _Copernicia_ were collected by
-Sintenis (no. 6512) near Utuado, and he also collected two other
-_Thrinax_-like palms of doubtful identity, one near Cabo Rojo and one at
-Fajardo.
-
-
- Key to the Genera of Sabalaceae
-
- Leaves depressed in the middle, with a distinct decurved midrib; a
- slender fiber rising from each of the notches which separate the
- leaf segments.
-
- INODES.
-
- Leaves flat, midrib rudimentary; segment without alternating fibers.
-
- Leaves chartaceous, naked on both sides when mature, the
- veinules unequal; fruits nearly sessile; seeds smooth,
- albumen solid except for a deep basal cavity.
-
- THRINAX.
-
- Leaves tough and coriaceous, the lower surface silvery with a
- persistent, closely appressed pubescence; veinules equal;
- fruits distinctly pedicellate; seeds deeply grooved or
- furrowed.
-
- Trunk tapering upward, tall and slender; pedicels short,
- bracteate at base; seeds subspherical, ruminate with
- deep narrow grooves; surface with a dull membranous
- cuticle.
-
- THRINCOMA.
-
- Trunk columnar, of equal diameter or enlarged upward;
- pedicels long, bracteate above the base; seed naked,
- smooth and shining, cerebriform, the surface irregular
- with broad furrows and convolutions.
-
- THRINGIS.
-
-
- =Inodes= gen. nov.
-
-In this genus, of which the hat palm of Puerto Rico may be considered
-the type, it is proposed to accommodate the dendroid palms commonly
-referred to _Sabal_, the type of which is _S. Adansonii_ Guersent. The
-most conspicuous difference between _Inodes_ and _Sabal_ is, of course,
-the fact that the former produces an upright trunk while the latter has
-only what might be called an underground rootstock, although such a
-distinction is quite artificial, both groups of species beginning life
-with a creeping axis which becomes erect in one and remains horizontal
-in the other. A much more important difference is to be found in the
-leaves which in _Inodes_ have secured strength by the development of a
-midrib, a tendency early abandoned by _Sabal_ in which the midrib is
-rudimentary and the middle of the leaf is the weakest part. The leaves
-of _Sabal_ are adapted for standing erect and avoid resistance to the
-wind by being split down the middle. The leaves of _Inodes_ which are
-held horizontal from an erect axis have attained the unique adaptation
-of a decurved midrib which braces the sloping sides of the leaf and
-effectively prevents the breaking above the ligule common in some of the
-species of _Thrinax_. It is true that leaves of young specimens of
-_Inodes_ stand erect like those of _Sabal_ and do not have the curved
-midrib, but even at this stage the midrib is relatively well developed
-and the blade opens out to an almost circular form instead of occupying
-an arc of 180 degrees or less as in the more strictly flabellate leaves
-of _Sabal_.
-
-Further differential characters might be enumerated, such as the short
-ligule and the flat petiole of _Sabal_. The inflorescence and seeds also
-afford differences, but these points are unnecessary for diagnosis, and
-their proper expression will require careful comparative study of the
-species of both genera, since _Sabal_ is not monotypic but includes at
-least two species from the Southern States and perhaps _S. Mexicana_
-Martius. Guersent’s _S. Adansonii_, the first binomial species to which
-the name _Sabal_ was applied, is, to judge from the figure, the smaller
-of our species, while Jacquin’s _Corypha minor_ may be the larger. Both
-species were described from hothouse specimens and the plates give no
-details really adequate for identification, but if there are but two
-species to be considered there can be little doubt that Jacquin’s
-drawing represents the larger of the two forms commonly referred to
-_Sabal Adansonii_, since the leaves are nearly four feet long with the
-mesial divisions united somewhat less than half way up. The basal
-segments are represented, however, as diverging horizontally and not
-obliquely as is usual in the living plants in the greenhouses of the
-Department of Agriculture.
-
-Guersent maintained that he was dealing with the _Sabal_ which Adanson
-had in mind in naming the genus, and made his specific name in
-accordance with that fact, treating _Corypha minor_ Jacquin, _Corypha
-pumila_ Walter and _Chamaerops acaulis_ Michaux as synonyms. The
-relative merits of these names and of _Chamaerops glabra_ Miller, which
-Dr. Sargent (Silva, =10=: 38) has resurrected, are not likely to be easy
-of determination, but since the last was based on plants grown from
-seeds which came from Jamaica, it seems unwise to use it for United
-States species to which the description is inapplicable. Miller’s name
-may, however, replace _Sabal taurina_ Loddiges which was also founded on
-a stemless _Sabal_ supposed to come from Jamaica.
-
-The species of _Inodes_ are in a similar or even worse state of
-disorder. There is little use, for example, in transferring to the new
-genus the traditional name _umbraculifera_ which was based by Martius on
-the _Corypha umbraculifera_ of Jacquin, but not on Linnaeus’ species of
-the same name, which is a native of Ceylon. Present taxonomic methods
-forbid such generic transfers of misapplied names, so that the name
-=Inodes Blackburniana= (_Sabal Blackburniana_ Glazebrook, Gardener’s
-Mag. =5=: 52. 1829) should be used instead of the traditional _Sabal
-umbraculifera_ of the conservatories, though the identity and origin of
-the species still remain in doubt.
-
-
- =Inodes causiarum= sp. nov.
-
- Trunk 45–75 cm. thick at base, 5–15 m. tall, columnar or slightly
- tapering upward; surface narrowly rimose or nearly smooth, light gray
- or nearly white. Leaf-bases splitting into rather brittle fibers,
- partly remaining compacted into long ribbons 5–8 cm. wide. Leaves
- about 4 m. long, the petiole subequal to the blade, considerably
- exceeded in length by the inflorescence. Petiole 3.8 cm. wide,
- distinctly carinate above near the end; ligule 4.2 cm. in diameter.
- Fruit grayish, 9–10 mm. in diameter; seed chestnut-brown, finely
- rugose or nearly smooth, 7–8 mm. in diameter; embryo oblique, at an
- angle of somewhat less than 45 degrees from the horizontal. Type
- specimen from Joyua (no. 154).
-
-The palm-leaf hats manufactured in large quantities in Puerto Rico are
-made from the present species. The center of the hat industry is at
-Joyua, a small village on the western coast of the island some miles
-southwest of Mayaguez and west of Cabo Rojo. Here many hundreds of the
-palms are growing along the shore in a narrow belt of coral sand.
-
-From the two species of _Sabal_ recognized by Grisebach _Inodes
-causiarum_ differs from _umbraculifera_ in having the inflorescence much
-longer than the leaves, while the trunk and leaves are much shorter and
-thicker than in _Sabal mauritiiformis_ a native of Trinidad and
-Venezuela which appears from Karsten’s figure, reproduced in the
-Natürlichen Pflanzenfamilien, to have neither the leaves nor the habit
-of an _Inodes_ though there is no other genus to which it can be
-referred with greater propriety. The diameter of the trunk of the
-Trinidad palm described as _S. mauritiiformis_ is given as from 12 to 15
-inches, while _I. causiarum_ is often two feet or more thick.
-
-From the Florida palmetto, =Inodes Palmetto= (_Corypha Palmetto_ Walter,
-Fl. Carol. 119. 1788) the Puerto Rico species differs most conspicuously
-in not retaining the old leaf-bases which give the trunk of the Florida
-palm so rough an appearance. The cause of this difference is doubtless
-to be found in the fact that as with most other palms the trunk of _I.
-Palmetto_ grows to full size while the surrounding leaf-bases are still
-alive, but in the West Indian species the trunk tapers greatly,
-especially in young trees, and the leaf-bases are torn away by its
-gradual enlargement to full diameter. The existence in southern Florida
-of an _Inodes_ having this last characteristic is a fact of much
-interest recently brought to my attention by Mr. E. A. Schwarz, of the
-U. S. Department of Agriculture. The specific distinctness of this palm
-was impressed upon Mr. Schwarz, not only by its naked trunk, different
-habit, and smaller size (5 m., instead of 10 to 20 m.), but also by the
-possession of a distinctly tropical insect fauna, quite different from
-that of the more northern palmetto with which he had previously been
-familiar.[2]
-
-This new Florida species it gives me pleasure to name =Inodes Schwarzii=
-in honor of its discoverer, in whose opinion of its distinctness I have
-great confidence, although he makes no claims to botanical skill. It is
-confined, as far as observed by Mr. Schwarz, to the coral reef formation
-of southern Florida, the most accessible station visited being about one
-mile south of Cocoanut Grove on the coral reef of the mainland side of
-Biscayne Bay. In the vicinity of Snapper Creek, _Inodes Schwarzii_
-extends to the Everglades where it is met by _I. Palmetto_. It was also
-seen on the Perrine Grant about six miles from Cocoanut Grove; it seemed
-not to occur about Miami but reappeared with the appropriate formation
-and attendant fauna at New River, though again absent at Lake Worth. A
-photograph secured by Mr. H. J. Webber (negative 164) on Taby Island
-near Long Key shows an _Inodes_ with a naked trunk and a smaller crown
-of straighter leaves than are normal for _I. palmetto_. Messrs. Swingle
-and Webber had also remarked the distinctness of the smooth-trunked
-palmetto of South Florida.
-
-A third robust species of _Inodes_ is growing in the conservatory of the
-Department of Agriculture labeled _Sabal umbraculifera_. It differs
-conspicuously from _I. causiarum_ by the very large leaves and by the
-great development of fine brown fibers which fill all the interstices
-between the leaf-bases, and suggest the name =Inodes vestita=.[3]
-Photographs of both the species have been prepared for the illustration
-of comparative detailed descriptions.
-
-_Sabal Mexicana_ has been reported from Cuba, and as it is described in
-Sargent’s Silva (=10=: 43) as having a trunk “often 2½ feet in
-diameter,” a robustness equalled only by the Puerto Rico trees, the
-question of its identity was examined. It appears that the original of
-_S. Mexicana_ came from southern Mexico and is a trunkless or very
-slender, rather than a robust species, being only about 10 cm. in
-diameter. The berry and the seed are described as closely similar to
-those of _Sabal Adansoni_. Sargent’s _S. Mexicana_ from southern Texas,
-in addition to the seven times greater thickness of the trunk, has a
-seed nearly 1.25 cm. broad with a strongly prominent micropyle. There
-can be little doubt that it is another new species, quite distinct from
-that of Puerto Rico, similar only in the unusual diameter of the trunk,
-which is furthermore described as bright reddish brown instead of white
-or very light grayish as _Inodes causiarum_. In the view of the
-apparently localized distribution of the species of this genus the name
-=Inodes Texana= would be appropriate for that described and figured by
-Sargent as noted above.
-
-In addition to the recently described =Inodes Uresana= (_Sabal Uresana_
-Trelease, Rep. Mo. Bot. Gard. =12=: 79), there is another large-seeded
-_Inodes_ on the western slope of Mexico, a specimen of which was
-collected at Acaponeta, State of Tepic (no. 1528) by Dr. J. N. Rose,[4]
-for whom this species may be named =Inodes Rosei=. The seeds are of the
-same size and shape as those of _I. Uresana_, but have the surface much
-more finely rugose, or nearly smooth, with the embryo directly lateral,
-not subdorsal. The branches of the inflorescence are slender and but
-little over 1 mm. in diameter instead of fusiform and thickened in the
-middle to nearly 3 mm. as shown in Professor Trelease’s photographic
-illustration.
-
-
- THRINAX Linn. f.; Swartz, Prod. Veg. Ind. Occ. 51. 1788
-
-In the genus _Thrinax_ were formerly placed all the West Indian
-fan-palms with smooth stems and no midribs, but the gradual discovery of
-numerous and diverse species has resulted in propositions for
-subdivision and segregation on the part of several botanists. As usual
-these new groups have been characterized very inadequately, and that
-mostly from the flowers and seeds, and with no attempt at establishing
-correlations of habit or other vegetative features without which the
-classification is likely to remain formal and artificial, as well as
-useless for popular and field study. Possibly no ecological differences
-exist among the _Thrinax_-like palms of other regions, but in Puerto
-Rico there are, as shown in the discussion of the following genus, two
-well-defined types, one of which varies the ordinary short columnar
-habit by the possession of a tall slender and flexible trunk which
-doubtless enables it to compete in a measure with the rapid growth of
-the surrounding vegetation, and which is also obviously adapted for
-withstanding the force of the strong winds encountered in the exposed
-places apparently preferred by palms of this species.
-
-The type of the genus _Thrinax_ is the Jamaican _T. parviflora_, a tree
-3 to 6 metres high with the trunk swollen at base. The leaves are said
-to be 30–60 cm. long with rigid lanceolate divisions; the stipes longer
-than the leaves, terete-compressed. The spadix is said to be terminal,
-nearly erect and 60–90 cm. long. The tree grows in dry maritime
-situations in Jamaica and Santo Domingo. It does not appear that the
-original specimens of this species have been examined by Sargent or
-other recent writers, but it seems reasonable to use the name for the
-group of short species with uniform albumen and a basal cavity instead
-of a complete perforation. Swartz’s statement regarding the seed “_intus
-albus, medio ruber_,” in connection with its context “_nauco osseo
-fragile tectus_” might possibly be rendered “white inside, red between”
-and might refer to the red coat of the seed rather than to a red center
-as commonly inferred. Of course Swartz might have cut his seed
-transversely, but if so he would doubtless have discovered and noted the
-perforation had one existed. Patrick Brown’s account of the Jamaica
-species, cited by Swartz, evidently refers to a palm with the habits of
-_T. Ponceana_. On the other hand the “very slender” palm referred to
-under this name in the Jamaica Bulletin (=I=: 196. 1894) shows greater
-similarity with _Thrincoma_.
-
-
- =Thrinax praeceps= sp. nov.
-
- Trunk 8–12 cm. in diameter at base, columnar or slightly enlarged
- upward, seldom attaining over 3 or 4 meters in height. The leaf-bases
- split in the middle of the midrib and long remain adherent to the
- trunk. When they finally fall away on older trees a rather rough
- grayish and longitudinally chinked rimose surface is exposed.
-
- The stalks of large leaves measure 75–80 cm. in length and 1.2–1.5 cm.
- in width. The middle divisions of the leaf are 55 cm. and under in
- length and attain a width of 4.8 cm., and in the middle of large
- leaves are united for more than half their length. Cross-veinules
- numerous, distinct in both surfaces but especially the upper. The
- white pubescence or tomentum which clothes the young leaves and is
- especially abundant on the ligule soon disappears, leaving the under
- side glaucous or slightly pruinose.
-
-This species is described at some length a little later in a comparison
-of generic characters under _Thrincoma alta_. The type specimen (no.
-850) was collected on the precipitous mountain-side which overhangs the
-road between Utuado and Arecibo, a short distance to the northward from
-the station where _Thrincoma alta_ was obtained.
-
-What is believed to be the same species was collected in a similar
-situation on the side of a mountain overlooking the town and valley of
-Lares.
-
-
- =Thrinax Ponceana= sp. nov. Plate 43
-
- Trunk 5–8 cm. or more in diameter, columnar, or slightly tapering or
- enlarged upward, 1–4 m. high; surface coarsely and irregularly rimose
- longitudinally. Leaf-bases separating into abundant rather loose light
- grayish or brownish fibers. Leaves numerous, large, drooping or
- pendant; petioles 65 mm. long, 1.5–2 cm. wide; segments attaining 75
- cm. in length and 3.5 cm. in width, united for half their length. Seed
- smooth, mahogany-brown, 5 mm. in diameter. Type specimen no. 1005.
-
-This species apparently exists in much larger quantities than any other
-yet known from Puerto Rico, being the predominant plant on several
-square miles of territory along the range of dry limestone hills which
-skirt the southern coast of the island, to the west of Ponce. Many of
-the palms are scattered among the taller shrubs and trees wherever there
-is sufficient soil and water to permit these to grow and yet not enough
-to give them exclusive possession, but on many of the drier and more
-sterile higher slopes the advantage is with the palms.
-
-This abundance of living material deserves more careful study than could
-be given during a very brief visit to this almost uninhabited part of
-the island, but one note of systematic interest was made. Several
-species of _Thrinax_, of which _T. Morrisii_ Wendland may serve as an
-example, have been described chiefly with reference to the relative size
-of the leaf segments and the extent of their separation. If the palms
-under observation near Ponce belonged, as was believed, all to one
-species, it is not only true that the individual _Thrinax_ passes all
-the stages from the narrow and grass-like, almost completely separated
-segments of the very young plant, to the more than half united leaf of
-the large tree, but it also appears to be true that under unfavorable
-conditions a _Thrinax_ may not be able to attain to full maturity of
-size and form but may at the same time produce flowers and seeds. In the
-narrow chinks and crevices of the bare rocks were very small, stunted
-trees, obviously of great age, while but a few feet distant a deeper
-fissure might hold vegetable débris and moisture sufficient to nourish
-vigorous specimens several times the size of their less fortunate
-companions. The stunted trees retain in proportion to their size, but
-apparently with little reference to their age, the small deeply divided
-leaves of young plants and have short few-branched inflorescences,
-another difference of supposed systematic importance.
-
-In _Thrinax Ponceana_ the leaves of well grown trees have the middle
-divisions united to about the middle; the smaller the leaves, the more
-deeply they are divided. A further correlation with size is that of the
-“fullness” of the leaf. The basal sinus is not closed by the overlapping
-of the lateral divisions as in some species, but the area is too great
-for a plane circle and there are one or more folds, more numerous and
-deeper in large leaves. The lateral divisions do not lie in the plane of
-the others but project upward or backward nearly at right angles with
-the plane of the middle divisions.
-
-The middle divisions of large leaves may measure 75 cm. in length by 3.5
-and sometimes nearly 4 cm. in width, while the narrowly grass-like
-lateral segment is only .8 cm. wide and about 30 cm. long. The lowest
-segment is not divided at the tip but is produced into a slender
-hair-like seta, 6 or 8 cm. long, making it nearly as long or longer than
-the next segment above.
-
-The normal segments are split at the apex to the distance of from 2 to 8
-cm. and the tips are usually markedly divaricate, owing to the fact that
-the young leaves of this species suffer two impressions from the bases
-of older leaves, one near the middle, the other near the end. The
-pressure causes the curvature of the unopened leaves, which in turn
-causes them to split apart when the leaf expands.
-
-Old leaves are smooth and glaucous on the lower side, but in the younger
-state more or less remains of the delicate appressed hairiness present
-on the lower surfaces of the newly opened leaves. The lower surface is
-distinctly grayish and glaucous, but under a lens it can be seen that
-this appearance is due to the presence of numerous whitish points
-(stomata?) among which are scattering brownish spots of larger size, the
-nature of which remains a question.
-
-The free stalks of the largest leaves attain 65 cm. in length and are 2
-cm. wide near the base, 1.5 cm. near the apex. The cross section is
-lenticular above, but the upper surface becomes flat toward the base.
-
-Young unopened leaves are covered near the base, both above and below,
-with a scurfy white tomentum and the margin of the ligule has a long
-white fringe.
-
-To avoid possible error it seems best to make separate entry of the
-following notes on specimens which might be considered quite distinct
-from the larger and normally mature form of _Ponceana_, but which
-represent, it is believed, merely a somewhat depauperate condition of
-that species, although leaves exactly comparable were not brought home
-by our party. The specimens in question were collected by Sintenis (no.
-3500) on the south coast of the island near Guanica and distributed from
-Berlin as “_Thrinax_ n. sp.”
-
-The leaves are characterized by the narrow straight-sided segments which
-retain the same width (15 mm. or less) for about 11 cm.; they are united
-in the middle of the leaf for about 8 cm. and the apical tapering part
-is about the same length. Other species, so far as known, have the
-segments much broader, both absolutely and relatively, and the width is
-held for a very much smaller proportion of the length.
-
-In addition the midrib is unusually weak, inconspicuous and only
-slightly prominent on the lower side. The small fibro-vascular bundles
-which compose it are sometimes spread apart so that there is scarcely an
-indication of a rib while in other segments of the same leaf, and
-especially at the base, the conditions are more normal. The midrib is
-sufficiently distinct above, though very small and fine in comparison
-with other species.
-
-Lower surface of leaf glabrous or somewhat glaucous, very slightly
-puberulous on the depressed veins near the base. Veinlets inconspicuous,
-mostly subequal, though 4 or 5 are sometimes a little larger than the
-others. Transverse veinlets indistinct below.
-
-Petiole slender, 4 mm. wide, lenticular in cross section; about 2 mm.
-thick. Ligule small and weak, short, with a small apical mucro.
-
-Fruits 5 mm. in diameter, olive brown, irregularly rugose-coriaceous on
-the outside as though dried from a pulpy condition; exocarp with a
-slightly sweetish taste. Seed bright mahogany-brown, darker below,
-depressed-globose, with a sublateral raphe; embryo ascending but more
-nearly lateral than vertical; conical basal cavity extending somewhat
-above the center, nearly filled with a deep red material.
-
-At the time of our visit in July no ripe fruits of _T. Ponceana_ were
-found on the trees, but a few picked up from the ground are apparently
-indistinguishable from those of Sintenis’ specimen.
-
-
- =Thrincoma= gen. nov.
-
- Trunk slender, tapering, flexible; wood firm, covered by a smooth hard
- brittle outer shell or bark.
-
- Leaf-bases long-sheathing, expanded by the separation of the fibers of
- the side opposite the midrib; petiole strongly flattened above the
- base, prominently angled above and below; ligule large and firm,
- produced laterally to support the outer divisions.
-
- Leaf-divisions narrow, separated below the middle and below the point
- of greatest width; texture firm and coriaceous; veinules subequal,
- close together, cross-veinules obsolete. Lower surface clothed with
- persistent closely appressed hairs, the upper coated with wax when
- young.
-
- Seeds with few longitudinal grooves, the surface not polished,
- grayish; embryo subapical.
-
-The generic name alludes to the preference of this palm for the summits
-of crags and the brows of perpendicular cliffs which abound in the
-limestone region of the north side of Puerto Rico.
-
-The tall, slender trunk and other differences between this genus and
-_Thrinax_ are probably to be interpreted as ecological adaptations
-necessary to enable the present palm to compete with the vegetation
-which often surrounds its base, and to withstand the winds to which it
-is commonly exposed. The species of _Thrinax_ and other allied genera,
-as far as known, have the trunk rigid and columnar, or even enlarged
-from the base upwards. When growing solitary and exposed they seldom, if
-ever, attain half the height of _Thrincoma_. Usually, however, they are
-protected by other vegetation or by growing gregariously in thickets.
-
-_Thrincoma_ might be described as a _Thrinax_ which has adopted habits
-of the arecoid genus _Acria_ which grows in similar situations in a
-neighboring part of the island. In addition to the smooth, slender, and
-flexible trunk _Thrincoma_ makes further provision against the wind in
-having fewer, less ample, tougher and more deeply divided leaves and
-like the arecoid palms it also drops the old leaves as soon as their
-usefulness is past, instead of retaining, like _Thrinax_, a large
-pendant cluster of them. The details of these differences are given
-below in a comparative note on fresh material of _Thrincoma alta_ and
-_Thrinax praeceps_ collected but a short distance apart in the lower
-part of the Arecibo valley along the Utuado-Arecibo road. In this region
-of jagged mountains, _Thrinax_ seeks shelter against the walls of
-perpendicular precipices, while _Thrincoma_ challenges the wind and the
-admiration of the traveller by its evident preference for the crags and
-pinnacles.
-
-
- =Thrincoma alta= sp. nov.
-
-With but one species known with certainty to belong to the present genus
-the separation of generic and specific characters would have little
-purpose. Data for a specific description are, however, contained in the
-following notes which are retained in their original comparative form as
-better illustrating the generic differentiation of _Thrincoma_ and
-_Thrinax_, as represented by _Thrinax praeceps_.
-
-The trunk of _Thrincoma_ differs in three adaptive particulars from that
-of _Thrinax praeceps_, _Ponceana_ and similar species which are merely
-columnar with very short internodes and an irregularly rimose surface,
-not smooth and hardened.
-
-1. There are distinct internodes from 3.5 to 5 cm. in length. These
-indicate rapid growth and would increase the chances of survival in the
-face of competition of quick-growing tropical vegetation.
-
-2. The trunk tapers gradually from a diameter of 9 cm. near the base to
-3.5 at the top, and thus possesses considerable flexibility in view of
-its great length, 11 meters, _Thrinax praeceps_ and other related types
-not exceeding 4 or 5 meters.
-
-3. In order to support the weight and strain of this greater height, the
-texture of the wood is extremely hard and firm, especially near the base
-of the trunk. Externally it is covered by a smooth shell or bark of very
-hard, brittle, dark colored material. The fibers of the interior which
-in _Thrinax_ are merely imbedded in a soft pith like those of a
-corn-stalk are here thickened and cemented together, as in tall palms of
-other groups, into a dense hard wood. In the specimen cut by us all but
-a small area of the middle of the trunk was thus hardened, rendering it
-extremely heavy. The wood-fibers of _Thrincoma_ are much coarser than
-those of _Thrinax_, and there appear to be none of the obliquely radial
-threads which are abundant in the wood of _Thrinax Ponceana_.
-
-With reference to methods of leaf-attachment four differences may be
-noted:
-
-1. In _Thrinax praeceps_ the leaf-bases split below in the median line
-and remain long attached to the trunk. This adaptation is not confined
-to the old leaves but appears while the leaves are still very young, or
-as soon as they begin to be expanded by the pressure of those above
-them. In the tall species such pressure separates the fibers of the
-opposite side of the cylinder. The short species has the outside of the
-leaf-bases densely tomentose, and the tomentum is especially abundant
-along the edges of the split midrib of the young leaf.
-
-2. The ligule of _Thrincoma_ is notably larger than that of _Thrinax_
-and continues to lie in the same plane as the blade, and becomes brown
-with maturity. In old leaves of _Thrinax_ the ligule stands nearly at a
-right angle to the blade and remains green.
-
-3. For leaves of the same size the petioles, not including the sheathing
-base, are longer (75–80 cm.) in the short than in the tall species
-(60–65 cm.).
-
-The petiole of the short species is of nearly the same width (1.2–1.5
-cm.) throughout, while in the other it is distinctly broader at both
-ends than in the middle. The enlargement at the ligule is abrupt. The
-base widens gradually to about 2 cm. but is much thinner than in the
-short species. In the upper part of the petiole the reverse is true, the
-cross section of the leaf-stalk of the _Thrincoma_ being almost
-diamond-shape, while that of _Thrinax_ is merely lenticular.
-
-4. These differences of proportion of ligule and stalk are obviously
-correlated with the different habits of the two species. The shorter and
-more robust trunk of the one enables it to withstand the strain of the
-relatively limited exposure to the wind. There is also a greater
-flexibility in the leaf itself, due to its thinner texture and to the
-smaller development of the ligule and adjacent thickened area, so that
-the leaves are often split to near the center. The narrow petiole of the
-tall species affords greater flexibility in the lateral plane while
-strength has been secured by the greater thickness. On the other hand
-the thinness of the base of the petiole of _Thrincoma_ reduces
-resistance by permitting the petiole to be twisted when the leaf is
-opposed to the wind or blown laterally, thus avoiding the strain which
-would come upon the more rigid base of the petiole in _Thrinax_.
-
-The more salient differences between the leaf-blades of the two species
-may be enumerated as follows:
-
-1. Although the length of the middle segments of the leaves of
-_Thrincoma_ are longer (62 cm.) than those of the other (55 cm.) the
-apparent size of the latter is much greater because they are fully
-expanded while those of _Thrincoma_ remain more or less fan-shaped,
-generally opening less than a semicircle. This decreases the lateral
-expansion, since the shortest divisions are brought to the sides, and
-gives no projection below the ligule where in _Thrinax_ more than one
-third of the foliar expanse is located.
-
-2. The leaf segments are much narrower (3.6 cm.) in the tall than in the
-short species (4.8 cm.).
-
-3. Practically the difference in width is still greater because the
-segments of _Thrincoma_ are never fully expanded but remain deeply
-channelled, thus decreasing the area of exposure to the wind and
-increasing the rigidity of the leaf.
-
-4. Resistance to the wind is also reduced in the tall species by the
-separation of all the segments to more than two-thirds their length,
-while in _Thrinax praeceps_ the median segments are united more than
-half way up. In the latter, as in the other members of the group, the
-separation begins at the point of greatest width of the segment, but as
-if to show that the deeply divided leaves of _Thrincoma_ are an
-adaptation, the greatest width is located near the longitudinal middle
-of the segments, 10 cm. or more above the bottom of the cleft.
-
-5. The texture of the leaf of _Thrincoma_ is thicker and firmer so that
-the segments generally remain straight to the tips while in _Thrinax_
-they often droop after the leaves have become fully expanded.
-
-6. The color of the leaves of the tall palm is a very dark green while
-those of _Thrinax praeceps_ are uniformly of a much lighter, fresher
-tint.
-
-7. The veinules of the firm leaves of _Thrincoma_ are more numerous and
-closer together than those of _Thrinax_.
-
-8. The veinules are also subequal in size, giving an appearance of
-uniform pattern, while in _Thrinax praeceps_ from 3 to 5 of the veinules
-of each side of the midrib are distinctly larger than the others, the
-larger veinlets being separated by from 3 to 10 smaller ones.
-
-9. In _Thrincoma_ the cross-veinules are scarcely visible to the naked
-eye; under a lens they are still obscure, never equalling in size the
-smaller of the longitudinal veinules, which they seldom appear to cross.
-In _Thrinax praeceps_, on the contrary, the cross-veinules are as large
-as the finer longitudinal ones; they are obvious without a lens and give
-the fabric of the leaf a peculiar marbled effect on account of the fact
-that they are generally oblique or wavy and commonly appear to cross
-several of the longitudinal veinules.
-
-10. The margins of the segments are thickened in both species, and on
-the upper side there is a groove inside the marginal rib. In the short
-species the margin is flat below and does not become decurved in drying.
-In the other the thin edge is closely folded under, and on drying the
-sides of the segments uniformly roll under, giving the dried leaves of
-the two species an appearance even more dissimilar than in the fresh
-state.
-
-11. The lower surface of the leaf of _Thrincoma_ has a silvery white
-layer of fine closely appressed hairs, all lying parallel to the veins
-and forming a continuous covering. The fibers seem not to be attached
-merely at one end, but along the side. They are firmly adherent and are
-to be removed only by scraping or rubbing; the surface underneath is
-deep green like the upper side, but the fibers remain in the grooves
-between the veins. In _Thrinax praeceps_ the lower surface of mature
-leaves is smooth and glaucous, a comparatively very slight hairy
-covering present in young leaves being evanescent, though traces of it
-are usually to be found in the deeper basal grooves. The glaucous
-appearance is due to the presence of numerous white or hyaline points
-arranged in rows (stomata?). The hairiness of one leaf and the glaucous
-character of the other are probably to be looked upon as different
-adaptations for the same purpose—the reduction of transpiration.
-
-12. The upper surface and the ligule of young leaves of _Thrincoma_ are
-covered with a layer of wax in the form of small plates or scales not
-present in _Thrinax_.
-
-
- =Thringis= gen. nov.
-
- Trunk columnar, rimose; wood pithy. Leaves coriaceous with equal
- veinules, silvery below with closely appressed whitish pubescence.
- Fruits distinctly pedicellate, the pedicel with a bract above the
- base. Seed cerebriform, irregular, with wide furrows and convolutions;
- surface smooth and shining. Embryo subapical.
-
-The characters of this genus are imperfectly known, none of the
-specimens being complete. Supposing however, that the association is a
-natural one, we have a genus with leaves and pedicellate fruits much
-more similar to those of _Thrincoma_ than to those of _Thrinax_, and at
-the same time a columnar, rimose and pithy trunk like that of _Thrinax_
-and _Coccothrinax_. The seeds appear to differ from those of all related
-genera in the possession of large irregular convolutions. The coriaceous
-leaves, small fruits, subapical embryo, and other differences separate
-this genus from _Coccothrinax_.
-
-
- =Thringis laxa= sp. nov.
-
- The trunk is columnar or somewhat enlarged upward, about 3.6 m. high
- and 12 cm. in diameter. Surrounding its base was a dense turf of fine
- upright rootlets. The bark was rough and rimose.
-
- The leaves are similar to those of _T. latifrons_, but smaller, the
- segments being about 70 cm. long by 33 mm. wide. The size of leaves is
- thus about the same as those of _Thrincoma alta_, but the texture is
- thin and flexible, the veinules being slender and not prominent on
- either side. The pubescence is much thinner than that of _T. alta_ and
- of a silvery-gray color.
-
-A palm collected in December, 1899, at Vega Baja, but without fruit (no.
-1041). The habit and trunk are not those of _Thrincoma_, but the form
-and texture of the leaves and ligule associate the species with
-_Thrincoma alta_ rather than with the palms here placed in _Thrinax_.
-
-The columnar habit and protected habitat are reflected in the small
-ligule, 18 mm. across, and the relatively broad petiole, 13 mm. wide. It
-appears from the dried specimens of this species and _T. latifrons_ that
-the leaves may have been “full,” or irregularly folded, instead of
-strictly and equally expanded as in _Thrincoma alta_, and the greater
-width of the segments is a further indication of this possibility. The
-rigidity of the leaf of _Thrincoma alta_ can be maintained because the
-segments are narrow and do not open widely.
-
-The soft texture of the leaves of this palm is recognized by the natives
-who use it for making hats and call it “yaray” the same name which is
-applied in this part of the island to _Inodes causiarum_.
-
-
- =Thringis latifrons= sp. nov.
-
-The leaves, inflorescence and young plants of a palm collected by
-Sintenis (no. 3278) on Monte Calabaza near Coamo are much larger and
-coarser than those of _Thrincoma alta_. The total length of the middle
-segments of the leaf would be over a meter, and the width of the larger
-divisions is over 5 cm. The thickness of the petiole at the base of the
-ligule is over 10 mm. The form of the ligule is much like that of
-_Thrincoma alta_, though scarcely as large in proportion to the size of
-the leaf.
-
-The lower surface is clothed with a satiny, appressed grayish pubescence
-somewhat less pronounced than that of _Thrincoma alta_. As in that
-species the veinules are of equal size, but they are more widely
-separated, and the wavy and usually somewhat oblique transverse veinules
-are easily distinguishable on both sides of the dried leaf. There are
-also slight traces of wax on the ligule and in the grooves of the upper
-surface. The median divisions are united for distinctly more than
-one-third their length.
-
-The spathes and spadix are distinctly larger than those of _Thrincoma
-alta_, but the fruits are, unfortunately, quite immature and contain
-only shriveled seeds. The pedicels of the fruits are 2–4 mm. long and
-bear, usually near the middle, a very slender bract 1–2 mm. long.
-
-This species is apparently distinct from _Thringis laxa_ in the larger
-size and firmer texture of the leaves. It differs in the longer pedicels
-of the fruits, with their longer and more slender bracts, from a
-specimen belonging to the New York Botanical Garden and supposed to have
-been collected by Mr. A. A. Heller, though the number (3278) indicates
-that it may belong to the Sintenis series.
-
-This consists of a single, short, once-branched inflorescence arising
-from two fibrous spathes. The fruits are about 4 mm. in diameter, nearly
-spherical, distinctly apiculate, deep reddish brown in color and borne
-on pedicels 2–3 mm. long, with a bract 1 mm. long or less at or below
-the middle. The seeds are 2–2.5 mm. in diameter; the surface is smooth
-and shining and light brown in color; general shape spherical but with
-deep folds and convolutions.
-
-No leaves are known in connection with this specimen, and the exact
-locality is also in doubt. Mr. Heller believes, however, that the
-inflorescence came from a small _Thrinax_-like palm growing in the
-limestone hills a few miles to the east of San Juan.
-
-
- Family ARECACEAE
-
-A large family, with abundant genera in the tropics of America and Asia,
-but absent from tropical Africa. The Puerto Rico representatives may be
-recognized very easily by the fact that the leaf crown is supported upon
-a column of the sheathing bases, a character of which the royal palm
-furnishes a conspicuous and ever-present example. Of the remaining
-genera, one, the betel palm of the East Indies is sparingly introduced
-about towns in the western part of the island and may be recognized at a
-glance by reason of the extremely dark green of its foliage. The other
-two genera are native palms confined to uncultivated areas and thus
-seldom seen at close range from traveled roads. The mountain palm,
-_Acrista_, covers the summits of many of the mountains of the island,
-but _Aeria_ seems to be confined to the range of high limestone crags
-which skirt the northern coast of the island between Bayamon and
-Arecibo.
-
-
- Key to the Genera of Arecaceae
-
- Trunk tall and slender, tapering from a swollen base; spathes numerous
- (7); inflorescence appearing in the axis of the rather persistent
- lower leaves, long and slender; staminate flowers arranged in
- rows.
-
- AERIA.
-
- Trunk robust or of uniform diameter; spathes 1 or 2; inflorescence
- short and brush-like, not exposed until the enclosing leaf below
- it falls away; flowers not set in rows.
-
- Spathe single, the fruits 2.5 cm. long; leaf-divisions upright,
- very dark green.
-
- ARECA.
-
- Spathes 2, fruits less than 1.25 cm. long; leaf-divisions
- horizontal or oblique.
-
- Trunk robust, thickened near the middle; leaf-divisions
- inserted by twos and standing at different angles;
- inflorescence twice or thrice branched, standing close
- to the leaf-bases.
-
- ROYSTONEA.
-
- Trunk slender, of uniform diameter; leaf-divisions at
- equal distances, horizontal; inflorescence
- once-branched, at maturity 15 cm. or more below the
- leaf-bases.
-
- ACRISTA.
-
-
- =Aeria= gen. nov.
-
-A tall slender palm evidently related to _Gaussia_, but the embryo
-lateral instead of basal, and the pinnae without basal cushions.
-
-Among palms in Puerto Rico _Aeria_ resembles only _Acrista_, from which
-it is readily distinguishable by the very slender habit, the swollen
-base of the trunk, the much-branched slender interfoliar inflorescence,
-the shorter sheathing bases of the leaves, and the numerous spathes.
-
-The embryo of _Aeria_ is located near the longitudinal middle of the
-seed on the side opposite the rudiment of the style, which is here
-located at the base of the fruit instead of on the side as in _Acrista_.
-The albumen is also uniform, except for a small central cavity and the
-outer covering is fleshy rather than fibrous.
-
-The position of the embryo is, perhaps, the most obvious difference
-between this genus and _Gaussia_, but there are several other
-significant discrepancies. Thus the flowers are arranged 3 or 4 in a
-row, very seldom 5 or 6. Three fruits develop from one flower only
-exceptionally. The trunk is of more than medium height, and the
-inflorescence is in reality infrafoliar, for although the dead
-leaf-bases and midribs of the leaves are persistent and support the long
-inflorescence, this condition is not comparable to that of the cocoid
-and other really interfoliar inflorescences.
-
-
- =Aeria attenuata= sp. nov. Plate 45.
-
-The tallest of Puerto Rico palms, probably attaining 30 metres and
-upward. The trunk is supported on a mass of coarse roots with spine-like
-projecting rootlets arranged in whorls. The surface of the trunk is
-smooth with very faint annular impressions. Near the ground the diameter
-is 12 to 15 cm. and increases upward to about 25 cm. at about 3 m. above
-the base. Above this swelling the trunk tapers very gradually and in
-tall specimens is less than 7 cm. in diameter at the top.
-
-The sheathing leaf-base is only 20 cm. long. The leaves remain attached
-long after the rupture of the open side, but no fibers are formed, the
-edges of the split side being fringed only with brown membranous shreds.
-The petiole is rather short, round and rigid and the rachis is
-prominently angled above.
-
-Segments of a rather firm texture and standing in different planes, but
-all more or less upright or oblique to the rachis, segments from middle
-of leaf 2.3 cm. wide near the base, 3.8 cm. long. The segments are set
-very closely together, especially the proximal, and overlap each other
-in a succubous manner. Fresh fruits deep orange in color and of an
-unsymmetrical oval in shape, 16 mm. by 12 mm., with a firm, fleshy outer
-covering 1.6 mm. thick, adherent to the seed, the three persistent
-styles remain of the same size and are located at the base of the fruit.
-
-The seed is flattened oval, 11 mm. by 9 mm., with a prominent basal
-tubercle (hilum). The surface is brownish with a few shallow impressed
-lines, but the albumen is white and uniform. Flowers and ripe fruit were
-obtained at Vega Baja in December, 1899; type specimen no. 1040.
-
-The so-called llume palm is a most striking ornament of the rugged
-limestone hills from Vega Baja to Manati and Arecibo. At a sufficient
-distance the slender trunk is no longer visible and the crown of leaves
-appears as if suspended in mid-air, while at closer range it does not
-seem possible that so slender a shaft can maintain itself. This very
-slenderness with the attending flexibility is however, an element of
-strength since it permits the trees to bend before the wind while the
-leaves diminish the resistance by straightening out as in the cocoanut.
-The hurricane of August, 1899, seemed to have done little damage to
-these tallest of Puerto Rico palms, many of which project for more than
-half their height above everything standing about them. As the trees of
-the rather sparse forest growth of these hills are commonly from 12 to
-18 metres tall, the llume palms must often attain upwards of 30 metres.
-
-
- ARECA CATECHU Linn. Sp. Pl. 1189. 1753
-
-In the western end of the island the betel palm of the Malay region has
-been sparingly introduced, though the fact does not seem to have been
-reported hitherto. A few were seen in gardens about Mayaguez and others
-in and near San Sebastian. So far as we were able to learn, the people
-do not know the name or nature of this introduced species which is
-apparently planted only as an ornament or a curiosity. The form is not
-unpleasing, but the extremely deep, sombre green of the foliage seems
-almost unnatural and imparts a suggestion of artificiality.
-
-Only photographs and fruits of _Areca_ were secured at San Sebastian,
-but Puerto Rico specimens collected by Sintenis (no 5749) at Aguadilla
-have already been distributed from the Berlin Botanical Garden with the
-label “Palma Spec. Subtrib. Attaleae.”
-
-
- ROYSTONEA Cook, Science, II. =12=: 479. 1900
-
-_Oreodoxa_ Martius and more recent authors, not Willdenow.
-
-The history of the generic name _Oreodoxa_ shows that botanical writers
-of the last few decades have been in error in removing the two original
-species and applying it to another series of similar but not closely
-related forms. To avoid further confusion with reference to a name which
-by reason of the conspicuous character of the trees has wide use in
-popular literature it seems desirable to add the following notes on the
-genus _Oreodoxa_ as originally established by Willdenow in the Memoires
-de l’Academie Royale, Berlin, 1804, a publication which seems to have
-been consulted very seldom, even by writers on palms.
-
-Spathe universal, univalvate; spadix ramose, perianth monophyllous,
-tripartite below, the divisions ovate, acute, concave; petals ovate,
-acuminate, concave. Filaments six, of the length of the corolla; anthers
-oblong, acute. Style tripartite, shorter than the filaments, stigma
-acute. Ovule, drupe, and seed globose; drupe succulent, but slightly
-fibrous; seed single, cartilaginous, nearly smooth, marked with a
-longitudinal sulcus. In the discussion subsequent to the statement of
-the above characters, _Oreodoxa_ is said to be distinct from _Bactris_
-in the tripartite style and in the absence of the “ordinary three
-impressions”; it is distinguished from _Areca_, then supposed to include
-_Euterpe_ and species now generally placed in _Oreodoxa_, in the single
-spathe, the triple style and the hermaphrodite flowers.
-
-The first species is _Oreodoxa acuminata_, referred by recent authors to
-_Euterpe_ but probably constituting a distinct genus. The trunk is
-erect, cylindrical, very smooth, and attains a height of from 15 to 18
-metres; the “root” throws out suckers at the base of the trunk. The
-fronds are pinnate, with opposite or alternate, very long, ensiform,
-acuminate pinnae, replicate at base. The strongly convolute young leaves
-form a green apex for the trunk, five feet high. Spathes cinereous,
-folded in at the base of the leaf-sheaths at the top of the trunk,
-univalvate, deciduous; spadix erect, much branched, having the
-appearance of a broom.
-
-The heart of the bundle of leaf-bases, about two feet long and three
-inches thick is eaten as a salad, with oil and vinegar. It is also
-stated that the deciduous boat-shaped spathes serve as reservoirs of
-rain-water which is long retained in the cool shade cast by the trees.
-Birds and beasts, and human natives as well, are said to be dependent at
-times upon the liquid thus stored, since in the regions where the palm
-grows there are at times no other means of procuring water. The forests
-of the high mountain chain of Buena Vista in the province of Caracas are
-the native home of the species. It thus appears that in addition to the
-structural differences _Oreodoxa acuminata_ occupies quite a different
-place in nature from that of the more thoroughly tropical species
-commonly referred to that genus, and the stoloniferous habit also
-indicates a different ecology.
-
-The second of the original species of _Oreodoxa_ is now referred to the
-genus _Catoblastus_. It is a somewhat smaller tree from 12 to 15 metres
-high, with a generally similar habit, and is also stoloniferous, but the
-pinnae are broad, cuneiform and praemorse, or irregularly truncate as in
-the species generally referred to _Martinezia_. The drupaceous fruit is
-grayish and the pulp is only slightly succulent; seed the size of a
-pigeon’s egg, its exterior brown, marbled with numerous veins. In the
-characters of the spathe the arrangement of the fruit and the edible
-quality of the heart of the leaf-cluster, as well as in the formation of
-lateral off-shoot this species is said to be similar to the first.
-
-Botanists are not yet agreed upon the methods of dealing with
-complications like the present in regard to the names of plants, but it
-appears certain that those who do not recognize _Oreodoxa_ as a genus
-distinct from those admitted in the more recent works on palms must
-associate it either with _Euterpe_ or _Catoblastus_. The latter name it
-would in that case replace, being much older. Moreover, unless we are
-prepared to disregard Willdenow’s statements concerning the
-stoloniferous trunk, the simple spathe and the hermaphrodite flowers, to
-say nothing of many minor points of circumstantial evidence, there is no
-scientific warrant for applying the name _Oreodoxa_ to the noble
-Antillean species with which it has been universally associated.
-
-The dried specimens which Willdenow studied were supplemented by notes
-of field observation by a court gardener, who was evidently also a
-botanist of some experience, to whom Willdenow refers as his “friend.”
-The living colors are described with considerable detail throughout the
-entire paper, which renders noteworthy the fact that the spathes are
-stated to be cinereous. This is in agreement with species of _Euterpe_
-which have membranous spathes, but indicates a wide difference from the
-West Indian trees where the spathes are thick and fleshy and remain
-vivid green until they open and fall away.
-
-The name _Roystonea_ has been given to this ornament of the Puerto Rico
-landscape as a respectful compliment to General Roy Stone, the American
-engineer officer who secured the admiration of the people of Puerto Rico
-by his fearlessness and conspicuous energy in the Adjuntas road-building
-campaign which flanked the line of Spanish defenses, and whose
-subsequent interest in the improvement of the island will undoubtedly
-affect its future history.
-
-
- =Roystonea Borinquena= sp. nov. Plate _45. f. 2_.
-
- Trunk normally fusiform, 30–60 cm. thick, 12–18 m. high. Leaf segments
- 4–4.4 cm. in width. Inflorescence robust, compact, twice branched, the
- branches numerous and coarse, ferruginous, pubescent. Fruits
- long-oval, yellowish brown at maturity. Seeds 8 mm. by 6.3 mm.,
- flattened about the hilum, rounded below; wall of endocarp smooth,
- adherent over a small area.
-
-The royal palm of Puerto Rico differs from that of Cuba in having the
-trunk generally shorter, more robust and more distinctly fusiform. The
-inflorescence is twice branched, with the branches more densely
-clustered, coarser and darker colored than those of the Cuban royal
-palm, _Roystonea regia_. They are also covered with a slightly hispid
-brown pubescence while Cuban specimens are much smoother and more
-pallid. The difference of habit, to judge from photographs of the Cuban
-species, is most apparent when the trees have grown in the open, as when
-planted in avenues or along roadsides. In Puerto Rico, trees which are
-obliged to compete with other vegetation are often tall, slender and
-unsymmetrical. The typical form is shown in our photograph (no. 250)
-taken in the plaza of Juana Diaz.
-
-Martius gives the width of the pinnae of the Cuban royal palm as from 8
-to 12 lines. Cuban specimens show as much as one inch and a quarter,
-while others from Porto Rico are half an inch wider (44 mm.) of somewhat
-coarser texture and with more widely separated secondary veins. The
-fruits of the Puerto Rico palm are a deep yellowish brown when ripe,
-while those of the Cuban are said to become violet or bluish black.
-According to Martius, the fruits of the Cuban species are 6 lines by 4,
-but dried specimens show no such discrepancy of proportions and measure
-only about 8.5 mm. by 7.5 mm.
-
-In Puerto Rico the fresh fruits are also much longer than broad, perhaps
-even more slender than the figures given for the Cuban; when dry they
-still appear somewhat longer and larger than the latter.
-
-The seeds of _Roystonea Borinquena_ differ in several particulars from
-those of the Cuban species. In shape they are longer and less spherical,
-measuring 8 by 6.3 by 5.5 mm. instead of 7.8 by 7 by 6 mm.; the side
-bearing the hilum is much flattened and even slightly concave; the
-fibers radiating from the hilum are longer, and the corner between the
-hilum and the micropyle is evenly rounded, not sharply squared and
-prominent as in _R. regia_. On the back of the seed the smooth inner
-wall of the endocarp is closely adherent over a small area, while in
-Cuban seeds this wall remains attached over nearly the whole side and is
-furthermore distinctly rugose-coriaceous on the surface, and has a
-distinct sulcus in the median line.
-
-The royal palm is not only the more conspicuous and characteristic
-natural object in most parts of Puerto Rico, but it probably exceeds the
-cocoanut in total economic importance. The most useful part is the
-_yagua_ or sheathing base of the leaf, with which a large proportion of
-the houses of the poorer classes are thatched or sided, or both.
-
-The royal palm is one of the wild species which has been distinctly
-advantaged by human interference in natural conditions. It is a general
-fact that outside the climbing species palms are not successful in
-competing with tropical forest vegetation. Originally the royal palm and
-the corozo were probably confined to the more rugged slopes of the lower
-limestone hills where they both still retain a foothold in places where
-the natural growth seems never to have been cleared away. But the vast
-majority of royal palms now in existence in Puerto Rico stand on land
-which has been cultivated at one time or another, and where the palms
-were able to secure a foothold before the competition of other plants
-became too strong.
-
-The discovery of root tubercles on a young plant of this species has
-been noted in the introductory statement. These tubercles though small
-in size are very numerous upon the smaller roots. In shape they are
-mostly oval and symmetrical. The larger are about 2 mm. in length though
-our natural-size photograph shows several fusiform or clavate bodies
-from 5 to 10 mm. long and as much as 2 mm. thick. The color of the roots
-and tubercles is white.
-
-The royal palm of Florida is commonly referred to _Oreodoxa regia_,
-though with very doubtful propriety. Apparently on account of its great
-size, Cooper (Smithsonian Report 1860: 440. 1861) was inclined to
-identify it with _Oreodoxa oleracea_ which had also been reported from
-the Bahamas. The inflorescence and seeds collected by Curtis on the
-western borders of the everglades (no. 2676) are, however, obviously not
-those of _R. oleracea_ but are much more similar to those of _R. regia_.
-The branches of the inflorescence are much longer and more lax than
-those of the species of Cuba and Puerto Rico, from which they also
-differ in the frequent development of tertiary branches, in this respect
-resembling _Roystonea oleracea_. The fruits do not resemble those of _R.
-oleracea_ but are closely similar to those of the other species though
-somewhat smaller and more nearly spherical. Several reliable witnesses
-are on record to the effect that the trees are from 28 to 35 metres high
-and as much as 45 metres has been claimed, while among the royal palms
-of Cuba and Puerto Rico 18 metres is the commonly recognized limit of
-size. Mr. C. T. Simpson, of the U. S. National Museum, states that the
-palms of southwestern Florida lack the conspicuous bulge so
-characteristic in the trunks of the Puerto Ricon trees, and that they
-grow almost in reach of tide-water, while the natural habitat of the
-Puerto Rico species is evidently the limestone hills. In view of these
-differences it seems preferable to treat the Florida royal palm as a
-distinct species, for which the name =Roystonea Floridana= is proposed.
-
-Mr. Simpson also informs me that the royal palms seen on the islands off
-the coast of Honduras had the size and habit of those of Florida and not
-the relatively stunted appearance of those seen by him in Hayti and
-Jamaica. This fact is suggestive in connection with the popular idea
-that the palms of Florida are to be looked upon as recent arrivals from
-Cuba. Instead it seems more reasonable to believe that the royal palm of
-Puerto Rico, like the species of _Thrinax_ of that island, is a remnant
-of the flora of the time when the limestone hills were keys and hammocks
-like those of southern Florida, and relatively poor in vegetation able
-to crowd out the palms.
-
-
- =Acrista= gen. nov.
-
- Trunk slender, of uniform diameter. Pinnae horizontal, appendiculate.
- Inflorescences distinctly infrafoliar; spathes two, the outer short,
- the inner long and slender. Spadix once-branched, the branches coarse,
- tapering. Fruits with stigma lateral, seed deeply ruminate, embryo
- basal.
-
-Related to _Roystonea_, but differing in the more slender habit, the
-once-branched inflorescence, the basal embryo, and in having the
-leaflets in one plane. The color of the foliage is also considerably
-lighter than that of the royal palm so that from a distance the general
-appearance suggests the cocoanut rather than the royal palm.
-
-There is also some resemblance between the foliage of _Acrista_ and
-_Cocops_, but the absence of sheathing leaf-bases in the latter genus
-will enable even young specimens to be separated. Moreover the
-leaf-divisions of _Cocops_ are much narrower and those at the end of the
-leaf are not so much shortened as in _Acrista_.
-
-Further differences from _Roystonea_ are to be found, such as the much
-smaller size and the larger roots, which are tuberculate and inclined to
-become superficial like those of the llume palm. The sheathing
-leaf-bases are not as long proportionately as in _Roystonea_, and there
-is a distinct formation of fibers, although the texture is flimsy. The
-outer sheaths do not split off and fall away as promptly as in
-_Roystonea_ but several dead ones sometimes hang from about the base of
-the crown. Although the sheath is longer than in _Aeria_ the fibers are
-much better developed, there being but a few membranous shreds in
-_Aeria_, and no distinct fibers at all.
-
-Among the mountains between Cayey and Guayama many summits are covered
-with the _palma de sierra_, probably in places which have never been
-cleared. A few of the palms follow down the steeper uncultivated
-ravines. From a distance the crowns suggest royal palms but a closer
-view renders the difference apparent. There is also no suggestion of the
-bulging trunk of _Roystonea_. In height the _palma de sierra_ probably
-does not exceed the royal palm.
-
-The tips of leaflets of young leaves are connected by two brittle red
-strands both of which lie on the mesial face, one along the edge, the
-other near the middle. The tips of the leaflets are of the same material
-and are sometimes persistent as long corneous appendices like those of
-the cultivated _Howea_.
-
-The generic name _Euterpe_ Gaertner, which is commonly applied to a
-considerable series of American palms related to the present, was in
-reality established for the Malayan genus for which the name
-_Calyptrocalyx_ Blume is now in use, _Pinanga silvestris globosa_
-Rumphius being cited by both Gaertner and Blume as the original, in the
-one case, of _Euterpe globosa_, and in the other of _Calyptrocalyx
-spicatus_. The origin and identity of the seed described and figured by
-Gaertner have not been established, and seem likely to remain in doubt;
-but in describing _Calyptrocalyx_, Blume argued that the generic name
-should remain with the seeds studied by Gaertner and declared that these
-did not belong to any Malayan species but to some of the arecoid palms
-of the Mascarene Islands. This suggestion seems not to have been
-disposed of by Martius or others, but the fact that Gaertner’s fruits
-showed an apical stigma seems to exclude them from the American group
-with which the generic name has been associated.
-
-In making use of the name _Euterpe_ for Brazilian palms Martius cites
-Gaertner as author of the genus and states that it is of worldwide
-distribution in the tropics. Gaertner’s _E. globosa_ is placed as a
-synonym of _E. oleracea_[5] Martius, and Jacquin’s older name _Areca
-oleracea_ stands in the same relation to _Euterpe edulis_ Martius, thus
-rendering _Euterpe oleracea_ Martius a specific homonym. Subsequently
-Martius claims the genus _Euterpe_ for himself and expresses doubt
-whether it is the same as that named by Gaertner, while Drude in Engler
-and Prantl’s Natürlichen Pflanzenfamilien says “_Euterpe_ Mart. (nicht
-Gaertn.).” Martius also admits that the West Indian _Areca oleracea_
-Jacquin is distinct from the Brazilian species of _Euterpe_, and
-redescribes it under the name _Oreodoxa oleracea_.
-
-A further complication connected with _Acrista_ was brought to light by
-finding that specimens collected by Sintenis (no. 1525) in the Luquillo
-Mountains in northeastern Puerto Rico and distributed from the Berlin
-Botanical Garden as _Oreodoxa oleracea_ belong to the present genus,
-together with others collected in Martinique by Hahn (no. 805) and
-identified at Paris. With the last, the local name _choux palmiste_ is
-given, the same which Jacquin noted in the original description of his
-_Areca oleracea_ (Stirp. Am. 278. 1763). Moreover, it can scarcely be
-determined from Jacquin’s description whether he was dealing with a
-_Roystonea_ or an _Acrista_ or with both, though his claim that his was
-the tallest palm of the Antilles might hold the name for the
-_Roystonea_.
-
-It might then be argued by some that Miller’s species, _Palma altissima_
-constituted a segregate from Jacquin’s _oleracea_ and that the latter
-name is available for the _Acrista_ of Martinique, whether identical or
-not with that of Puerto Rico. But with a possible doubt between the
-_Acrista_ and the _Roystonea_ there can scarcely be a justification for
-the use of the same name for a third South American species or a fourth
-West Indian.
-
-As a means of decreasing the confusion it may be suggested that as
-neither the generic nor the specific name of the Brazilian palm which
-Martius called _Euterpe oleracea_ (Hist. Nat. Palm. 2: 29) is available,
-the name =Catis Martiana= may be proposed, the generic designation
-having reference to the drooping pinnae characteristic of the present
-species and several of its South American relatives.
-
-
- =Acrista monticola= sp. nov. Plate 44.
-
- Trunk smooth, 10 to 15 m. high, perhaps taller, from 12 to 15 cm. in
- diameter, with distinct ring-like leaf-scars and internodes, light
- brownish or appearing grayish with bark lichens.
-
- Leaves about 2 m. long, the pinnae lanceolate, equally spaced and
- lying nearly horizontal, 55 cm. long and 4 cm. broad; the surface
- light green on both sides, with very close parallel longitudinal
- veinlets, but no visible cross veins. The sheathing bases are
- considerably shorter and generally appear somewhat more robust than in
- _Roystonea_. In protected situations the leaf-bases persist and the
- margins shrivel up and expose a flimsy network of fibers.
- Inflorescences appearing several close together; by the falling of the
- leaves above them they are left several inches below the leaf-bases
- before maturity is attained. Spathes fusiform, long, more slender and
- pointed than in _Roystonea_. Spadix once-branched, 1 m. long, 6 cm. in
- diameter at base, tapering gradually to the apex. Branches 23 cm. long
- and less, the proximal branches longest; at first appressed to the
- rachis, the branches are opened out and held stiffly erect by a fleshy
- turgid cushion on the upper (distal) side of the base of each. The
- branches of the rachis may thus be said to be hinged, and with
- maturity the supporting cushion dries away and allows them to resume a
- direction nearly parallel to that of the rachis.
-
-The dried fruits of _Acrista_ are grayish brown in color and nearly
-smooth or somewhat coriaceous in external texture; they measure 11 or 12
-mm. in length and are nearly as wide, being slightly oboval in shape.
-The outer wall is thin and brittle and covers a more or less distinct
-thin layer of amorphous brownish material probably representing the pulp
-of the fresh fruit; in the dry state this may adhere either to the outer
-wall or to the fibers next inside. Near the base these fibers are
-simple, pointed and vertical; about half way up they divide and
-anastomose and are, as it were, felted and cemented together to form an
-oval sac open below and closed above. The outer fibers are much coarser
-than the inner and there are sometimes suggestions of three layers
-separated by a dark-brown friable material. A few of the delicate inner
-fibers are adnate to the surface of the seed which is otherwise free
-from its fibrous covering.
-
-Seed 8.5 mm. by 8 mm., slightly lighter in color than the outside of the
-fruit. Surface slightly uneven with obscure veinlike ridges and
-impressions of the fibers of the outer covering. The kernel is white,
-hard and bony, and deeply ruminate, though this is not apparent from the
-outside. The channels are very narrow and often radial and straight;
-they penetrate 3 mm. or less. Embryo directly basal; hilum lateral,
-somewhat below the level of the stigma; a short raphe extends about half
-way to the embryo.
-
-
- Family COCACEAE
-
-The cocoid palms are a distinctly American group, the African oil-palm,
-_Elaeis Guineensis_ and the cocoanut being the only outliers of the
-family which have been supposed to be indigenous in the Old World. South
-America is the center of distribution and is the home of a large
-proportion of the two hundred or more species. Only five genera reach
-Puerto Rico, and one of these, _Cocos_, was probably not a native of the
-island.
-
-
- Key to the Subfamilies of Cocaceae
-
- Trunks, stems, and midribs beset with sharp spines; seeds foraminate
- at or above the middle.
-
- Subfamily BACTRIDINAE.
-
- Trunks and other parts unarmed; seeds foraminate at base.
-
- Subfamily COCINAE.
-
-
- Subfamily BACTRIDINAE
-
-Some of the numerous South American representatives of this group are
-nearly smooth, but the three genera known from Puerto Rico have the
-trunks, leaf-bases, midribs and inflorescences beset with sharp black
-spines, and are thus readily recognizable.
-
-
- Key to the Genera of Bactridinae
-
- Trunk small, cespitose; leaves separated by long internodes; foramina
- of seeds apical.
-
- BACTRIS.
-
- Trunk medium or large, solitary; leaves crowded together at the
- summit; foramina peripheral.
-
- Trunk slender; leaf-divisions broad, praemorse-truncate;
- pistillate and staminate flowers intermixed on the
- inflorescence; exocarp fleshy.
-
- CURIMA.
-
- Trunk robust; leaf-divisions narrow, sharp-pointed; pistillate
- flowers below and separate from the staminate; exocarp
- fibrous.
-
- ACROCOMIA.
-
-
- BACTRIS Jacquin, Stirp. Am. 279. _pl. 271._ 1763
-
-The type of this genus, _Bactris minor_ Jacquin, described from the
-vicinity of Carthagena, Colombia, is a small spiny palm with creeping
-rootstocks. The upright trunks are about an inch thick and twelve feet
-high, with long spiny internodes. The fruits are fleshy, purple, and
-about the size of a cherry. Several species of _Bactris_ are known from
-the West Indies though the generic name has doubtless been applied
-rather loosely to all the small spiny cocoid palms.
-
-The two following species of _Bactris_ from Puerto Rico described by
-Martius several decades ago seem not to have been secured by recent
-collectors unless it be true, as suggested below, that one of them, the
-simple-leaved _B. acanthophylla_ applies to a young _Curima_. Of _B.
-Pavoniana_ the narrowly grass-like leaf-divisions would be sufficiently
-characteristic to separate it at once from all other palms known from
-Puerto Rico.
-
-
- BACTRIS ACANTHOPHYLLA Martius, Palm. Orbign. 67
-
-“Trunk low, spiny; frond simple, the petiole spiny; blade lanceolate in
-young plants, oblong in the adult, cuneate at the base and bifid at
-apex, the margin unequally erose, unarmed; rachis and primary veins
-spiny on both sides; spines bristle-like, narrowed at base, those of the
-petiole black, those of the blades fuscous.”
-
-“In the western part of the island of Puerto Rico, near the village of
-Yrurena, in swampy places on the margins of aboriginal forests at an
-altitude of 400 feet; collected by Wylder, 1827.” (Martius Hist. Palm.
-=3=: 281.)
-
-A specimen to which the above diagnosis would not be inapplicable was
-collected by Sintenis in the mountain forests near Maricao (no. 484). It
-was distributed from Berlin as a _Martinezia_, together with two other
-very young plants and a seed to which one of these was attached.
-
-The seed evidently did not come from a cocoid palm but together with the
-young seedlings may belong to _Acrista_. The large spiny plant is
-probably a young specimen of _Curima_, and should these suggestions
-prove to be correct the specific name _acanthophylla_ must be
-transferred to this genus though whether it will replace _colophylla_ or
-not is not to be determined until it can be ascertained that the Maricao
-species is the same as that here described from Bayamon.
-
-
- BACTRIS PAVONIANA Martius, Palm. Orbign. 70
-
-“Frond pinnate, rachis with rather long spines and black bristles:
-linear acuminate, about equally distant, the terminal united,
-setose-ciliate, glaucous below and with a sparse whitish down.”
-
-“Puerto Rico; Pavon.” (Martius, Hist. Pal. =3=: 282.)
-
-Grisebach has reported this species from Antigua and has redescribed it
-as follows, presumably from the Antigua specimens.
-
-“‘Trunk low’; _leaves pinnatisect: segments numerous, grass-like,
-linear-acuminate_ or the uppermost broader by cohesion, glaucous and
-minutely puberulous or glabrescent beneath, approximate, subequidistant,
-reduplicate at the base: _rachis armed with very long black prickles_
-and rare bristles, keeled above.—Flowers unknown; leaf segments (in our
-specimens, which are cut off, perhaps about the middle of the rachis)
-more than 30–jugal, 3‴–6‴ distant, 12″–8″ long, 4‴–2‴ broad, superior
-gradually shorter, the uppermost cohering ones sometimes 6‴–8‴ broad:
-prickles scattered or clustered, slender, the greatest 2″ long. Hab.
-Antigua: _Wullschl._, Blubber valley; [Portorico].” (Grisebach, Fl.
-Brit. W. I., 520. 1864.)
-
-
- =Curima= gen. nov.
-
- Trunk rather slender, internodes armed with scattered slender spines.
- Leaves and inflorescence also spiny, especially on the proximal parts.
- Pinnae numerous, strap-shaped, praemorse-truncate, imperfectly
- separated near the ends of the leaves. Inflorescence rather slender,
- once-branched; pistillate flowers mostly located near the bases of the
- branches. Fruit drupaceous, exocarp fleshy, not fibrous; foramina
- peripheral.
-
-A palm related to _Acrocomia_ and to the genera commonly grouped under
-the name _Martinezia_, to which _Aiphanes_ and _Marara_ are generally
-referred as synonyms. Reasons why none of these names appears available
-for the Puerto Rico species are given below. The characters of the
-fruit, with foramina near the middle, seem to indicate that _Curima_ is
-not remotely related to _Acrocomia_, from which it differs superficially
-in the more slender habit, the truncate or praemorse leaves and the very
-long and lax inflorescence.
-
-
- =Curima colophylla= sp. nov. Plate 46.
-
-The solitary trunk rises from a mass of spiny roots somewhat smaller
-than those of the llume palm (_Aeria_). Diameter of trunk from 1–1.5
-cm., often slightly thinner near the ground, though showing no such
-tendency to bulge as appears in _Roystonea_, _Aeria_ and _Acrocomia_.
-The surface of the internodes is rather sparingly provided with
-needle-like spines smaller and more slender than those of _Acrocomia_.
-On old trunks the spines are often more or less completely absent.
-
-Leaves 2.13–2.5 m. long, with from 30 to 40 pairs of strap-shaped
-praemorse-truncate divisions shorter and broader as the end of the leaf
-is approached, and with a terminal undivided area several inches wide.
-There is no apparent tendency toward the arrangement of the
-leaf-divisions in clusters as in _Martinezia caryotaefolia_ and other
-allied species.
-
-The base, rachis, midribs and even the surfaces of the pinnae are beset
-with coarse black or deep red spines which are closely appressed when
-young and become erect as soon as the surfaces are exposed, all the
-parts except the spines and the upper surfaces of the leaf-division
-being covered at first with a light grayish or brownish scurfy coating
-which gradually disappears.
-
-The inner spathe is narrowly fusiform and about 1 m. long. It splits to
-the level of the outer spathe revealing the spadix and its extremely
-spiny peduncle. The flowers are greenish cream colored in mass, paler
-and not so yellow as in _Acrocomia_. The pistillate flowers are
-relatively very few and located near the base of the simple branches.
-
-The cherry-like fruits are dull orange or brick red with rather dry
-fleshy or oily exocarp having a rather mealy though distinctly acid
-flavor, but no really unpleasant taste. This fleshy covering is only
-very slightly fibrous, and that near the base; the seeds fall off very
-easily sometimes leaving the base of the exocarp attached to the
-fruiting branch. The nut is about 12 mm. in greatest or transverse
-diameter and about 10 mm. high, while the fresh fruit is 14–16 mm.
-through and 12 or 13 mm. thick. The surface is deeply and irregularly
-pitted and marked with three radially fibrous striate foveolae.
-
-It is perhaps too soon to assert that there is only one species of the
-present genus in Puerto Rico. The trees certainly differ considerably in
-size though not more than the cocoanut and others. There is also a
-noticeable difference in the abundance of spines. Such apparent
-variability may, however, be due to age, the older trees tending to
-become less densely beset with the brittle black spines which are often
-conspicuous on young specimens.
-
-The specimens (no. 878) and photographs on which this genus and species
-were based were secured on the limestone hills near the wagon road
-between Bayamon and Toa Baja where the present palm is not uncommon.
-
-_Curima_ appeared to be especially abundant about Bayamon but is
-probably rather generally distributed in the limestone hills of the
-island, perhaps also on other soils. A few trees were seen along the
-road between Utuado and Lares, and numerous others between Isolina and
-Manati. Sintenis collected specimens of what is apparently the same
-species near Juncos and Hato Grande, and at Maricao young specimens
-discussed under _Bactris acanthophylla_.
-
-As far as Puerto Rico is concerned, this palm is very easily recognized
-by means of the curiously truncate leaf-divisions, the outer margins of
-which appear as though accidentally injured or eaten away by
-caterpillars. This feature is, however, shared with numerous other West
-Indian and South American palms, though apparently only one, the
-so-called _grigri_ palm of Martinique can be referred to the present
-genus with confidence. For this the name =Curima corallina= (_Martinezia
-corallina_ Martius, Hist. Nat. Palm. 3: 284) appears to be correct,
-although Martius places Gaertner’s much older _Bactris minima_ as a
-synonym for his species. Gaertner, however, was making a second attempt
-at renaming Jacquin’s _Bactris minor_, having previously misplaced that
-name in connection with a West Indian _Acrocomia_, probably the same to
-which Jacquin had already supplied the name _Cocos aculeatus_. Thus it
-is possible to treat _Bactris minima_ Gaertner as a synonym of _Bactris
-minor_ Jacquin and the restoration of Gaertner’s inappropriate name for
-the _Curima_ is thus avoided.
-
-With this preliminary description we may return to the consideration of
-the generic names _Martinezia_, _Aiphanes_ and _Marara_ which other
-writers have applied to relatives of the present palm or treated as
-synonyms. _Martinezia_ was described by Ruiz and Pavon (Prodr. Flor.
-Per. et Chil. 148. 1794) for five Peruvian palms, but it was amended by
-Martius (Hist. Nat. Palm. =3=: 283) by the removal of all the original
-species and the substitution of a new set. Of the original species
-studied by Ruiz and Pavon only two, _M. ciliata_ and _M. abrupta_ were
-mentioned in connection with the original description of the genus, and
-this because they offered exceptions to the generic characters. If these
-were to be excluded for this reason from those among which the type is
-to be sought, the name _Martinezia_ must go with the subsequently
-published _M. ensiformis_, now referred to _Euterpe_[6] or with _M.
-lanceolata_ and _M. linearis_, now placed in _Chamaedorea_. If we hold
-to the first species, _M. ciliata_, _Martinezia_ is probably a synonym
-of _Bactris_. The second species, _M. abrupta_, has escaped Martius and
-the Index Kewensis, in which a sixth name _M. interrupta_ is the only
-one by Ruiz and Pavon now credited as being a genuine _Martinezia_. Thus
-by the method of elimination _Martinezia_ would according to current
-classification replace _Chamaedorea_ while by the method of types it
-would stand as a synonym of _Bactris_.
-
-The genus _Aiphanes_ was established by Willdenow on _Aiphanes
-aculeata_, a spiny palm from the mountains about Caracas. The trunk is
-said to be erect, ten meters high, subcylindrical and very spiny. The
-leaves are about 1.6 m. long, with four pairs of remote, broad, cuneate,
-praemorse pinnae, strongly whitish pubescent on the under side; the
-petiole is also beset with spines. Spathe acuminate at both ends,
-aculeate on the outside, smooth within, opening longitudinally; spadix
-4.5 dm. long, composed of cylindrical spikes placed opposite. Flowers
-hermaphrodite; calyx trifid, the divisions acute; petals acuminate;
-filaments 6, subulate, anthers rounded, style as long as the stamens,
-stigma trifid; drupe globose, the fleshy farinaceous pulp rather
-tasteless, though edible; nut hard, of the size of a musket ball,
-unilocular, black, furrowed with a large number of grayish grooves, of
-which three are always much larger than the others. The kernel is white,
-very sweet, and very good to eat. _Aiphanes_ grows in the ravines and
-forests of the high mountains of the district of Caucagua, province of
-Caracas, Venezuela and requires a fertile, somewhat moist soil. It
-flowers and fruits in July.
-
-From the above it appears that _Aiphanes_ is a genus quite different
-from _Curima_, approaching some of the South American species of
-_Bactris_ much more closely than it resembles the Puerto Rico tree.
-
-The genus _Marara_ was based by Karsten (Linnaea, =28=: 389) on _M.
-bicuspidata_ from Colombia, a cespitose palm having a trunk 7 meters
-high and 10 cm. in diameter, clothed with black spines 6 to 8 mm. long.
-The leaves are 125 cm. long with from 60 to 80 pairs of cuneate pinnules
-which measure 3 dm. in length and 15 cm. in width, and are clustered in
-sixes or eights. This appears to be a very extreme development of the
-leaf-arrangement seen in the cultivated palm commonly called _Martinezia
-caryotaefolia_ where the leaflets are distinctly clustered, but by no
-means so crowded as must be the case when on the side of a leaf 125 cm.
-long are leaflets with an aggregate width of 10–13 m.
-
-The palm commonly cultivated in conservatories as _Martinezia
-caryotaefolia_ is obviously allied to _Curima_, perhaps more closely
-than to either _Aiphanes_ or _Marara_, but in addition to the clustered
-pinnules it has a more slender habit, especially apparent in the long
-internodes and the more lax inflorescence. This difference in habit is
-also evidently correlated with the fact that the leaf-bases do not
-become deeply gibbous and obliquely inclined from the trunk as in
-_Curima_ but remain closely sheathing. Moreover, the upper side of the
-leaf-stalk which in the Puerto Rico palm is deeply channeled and has
-lateral corners sharp or torn into fibers nearly to the insertion of the
-lowest pinnae is in the conservatory species nearly cylindrical for a
-long distance below the pinnae, and has long spines on the upper side as
-well as on the lower. It is as though the ligule were located in
-_Curima_ near the insertion of the lowest pinnae while in the other form
-it remains close to the trunk, with a cylindrical section intercalated
-to reach to where the pinnae begin. Apparently we are dealing with still
-another generic group for which the name =Tilmia= would not be
-inappropriate in allusion to the shorn and disheveled appearance which
-it shares with _Curima_. The species studied are =Tilmia caryotaefolia=
-(_Martinezia caryotaefolia_ H.B.K. Nov. Gen. et Sp. =I=: 305. _pl. 699_)
-in the National Botanic Garden and =T. disticha= (_Martinezia disticha_
-Linden, Cat. 32. 1875).
-
-The seeds of _Tilma caryotaefolia_ are like those of _Curima_, but
-considerably larger, rounder, and much smoother. The foramina are
-peripheral, but are much smaller and more shallow, those of _Curima_
-being surrounded, as it were, by a prominent rim which adds somewhat to
-the apparent width of the seed. In both genera the nuts are
-unsymmetrical, the side which has the largest foramen being distinctly
-larger than the others and in _Curima_ the irregularly pitted sculpture
-is coarser.
-
-
- ACROCOMIA Martius, Hist. Nat. Palm. =2=: 66
-
-A genus of palms distributed through tropical America from Mexico to
-Cuba and Paraguay. All the species are of stocky, compact growth, with a
-dense crown of numerous leaves. The trunk and the leaf-stalks are
-usually armed with strong, sharp spines, sometimes several inches long.
-
-Although totally different on close inspection this genus has in Puerto
-Rico a superficial resemblance to the royal palm, which often deceives
-travelers. The similarity lies mostly in the two facts that both the
-royal and corozo palms are more robust and stiffly erect than the
-cocoanut, and that the leaf-divisions instead of lying horizontal and in
-one plane are tilted at different angles to the midrib, thus giving the
-foliage seen in the mass a somewhat unkempt appearance in comparison
-with the cocoanut.
-
-In distinguishing the corozo palm from the royal palm when seen at a
-distance so great that the spines of the one and the columnar green
-leaf-sheaths of the other can not be seen, recourse may be had to the
-following facts. The leaf crown of the corozo palm is much rounder,
-thicker and more compact than that of the royal palm, since it contains
-many more leaves, and these persist much longer. The royal palm can also
-be known by the unopened leaves which project straight upward like
-flag-poles or lightning-rods, while in _Acrocomia_ the leaves open as
-they are pushed out and seldom offer a suggestion of the spire-like
-effect.
-
-
- =Acrocomia media= sp. nov.
-
- Trunk 20–30 cm. in diameter near the base, thickened above to 50 cm.
- or less; height commonly about 6–8 m. rarely exceeding 10 m. Surface
- of trunk with slight annular impressions. Internodes armed with
- slender black spines, the larger 10–15 cm. long, mostly confined to
- the lower half of the internodes. Fruit green, becoming yellowish, the
- husk firmly fibrous, inedible; about 35 mm. in diameter, nearly
- spherical in shape, with a distinct apical papilla. Kernel 25 mm. wide
- by 22 mm. long; width of the cavity 18 mm. The type specimen was
- collected near Ponce (photograph no. 255).
-
-The _Acrocomia_ of Puerto Rico seems to differ from _A. aculeata_
-(Jacquin) in its robust habit and somewhat bulging trunk, while it is
-less stout and less swollen than _A. fusiformis_ (Swartz). The name
-_Acrocomia lasiospatha_, although used by Martius and Grisebach has no
-warrant for supplanting _fusiformis_ of Swartz, which must be preferred
-for the Jamaica species with the thick, swollen trunk.
-
-In Jamaica there seem to be at least two species of _Acrocomia_, the
-larger of which is called the “great macaw” palm, and is described as
-having a fusiform trunk as thick as a man’s body. What is presumably the
-same species occurs in Cuba as shown by a photograph from the vicinity
-of La Gloria on the north coast. The greatest diameter of the trunk is
-three or four times the thickness near the base. In Puerto Rico no trees
-approximating these proportions were observed, the greatest amount of
-swelling probably not reaching twice the diameter below. According to
-Maza _Acrocomia lasiospatha_ grows wild in Cuba and is known under the
-name “coroja de Jamaica.” Swartz described his _Cocos fusiformis_ on the
-supposition that it was distinct from the _Cocos aculeatus_ of Jacquin,
-from Martinique, by reason of the fusiform trunk. The species was,
-nevertheless, reduced by Martius to his South American _Acrocomia
-sclerocarpa_, perhaps because the spathe is said to be spiny, a
-character probably subject to great variation.
-
-Jacquin’s name _Acrocomia aculeata_ (1763) must, it seems, be used for
-the West Indian palm placed by Martius under his _A. sclerocarpa_, which
-is to be maintained, if at all, as a South American species. Jacquin
-declares that the habit of his tree is similar to that of _Cocos
-nucifera_ and _Cocos amara_ (_Syagrus_), and his figure shows a tall
-straight trunk tapering slightly upward, with no tendency to bulge. The
-spines of the trunk are few and the midribs are aculeate on both sides.
-The drawing of the fruit is 37 mm. long by 41 mm. wide and has a broad
-conic papilla at apex. As indicated above, such a tree was not noticed
-in Puerto Rico where all the corozo palms are distinctly, though
-slightly, thicker some distance above the base, though apparently never
-equaling _A. fusiformis_ in this respect.
-
-
- Subfamily COCINAE
-
-
- Key to the Genera of Cocinae
-
- Trunk distinctly ringed, rising from an inclined swollen base; leaves
- numerous, many of the lower drooping or pendant, the divisions
- many and narrow; fruits very large, borne continuously.
-
- COCOS.
-
- Trunk nearly smooth, straight and columnar; leaves fewer, not becoming
- pendant, divisions less numerous and broader; fruits small, borne
- at one time and ripening together.
-
- COCOPS.
-
-
- COCOS NUCIFERA Linn. Sp. Pl. 1188. 1753
-
-The cocoa-palm is largely confined to the neighborhood of the coast, but
-is occasionally planted in small numbers in the interior districts,
-though it generally does not thrive in such situations especially on the
-north side of the island. On the drier southern slope of Puerto Rico,
-which is avoided by the royal palm, the cocoanut seems to thrive better,
-when it has once become established. Cocoanuts are mostly gathered while
-still green, for the sake of the milk or, as it is there called, the
-water (_coco de agua_) a popular beverage wherever obtainable. Although
-the local consumption of nuts for this purpose is considerable it is
-largely confined to the towns of the coast region. Thus it may be said
-that in Puerto Rico the cocoa-palm affords a luxury rather than a
-necessity, and that it is exceeded in economic importance by the royal
-palm.
-
-
- =Cocops= gen. nov.
-
-In a valley on the road between Lares and San Sebastian several young
-palms were noticed with leaves similar to the cocoanut, but smaller and
-finer. Finally one mature specimen was found, with both trunk and leaves
-strongly suggesting the cocoanut, but much smaller. The leaves are light
-green, the leaflets in one plane, and the fibers separating from the
-narrow base of the leaf. The fibers are few and flimsy, but like those
-of the cocoanut and other South American species of _Cocos_. The palm
-stood within a few feet of a small permanent brook, down which the seeds
-had evidently been carried and there were several young palms along the
-bank. The native living in an adjacent house could give us no name
-except _palmilla_, and seemed to think that none was necessary since the
-tree does not yield _yagua_ or anything else of use. Its early
-extermination is therefore not unlikely.
-
-In the absence of flowers and fruit[7] the relationships of the present
-genus cannot be ascertained nor its validity satisfactorily established.
-There seems, however, to be no reason for including the species in any
-of the genera known from Puerto Rico or other parts of the West Indies,
-and to associate it with Central and South American types would be a
-still less warrantable procedure.
-
-It is also believed that under the present circumstances the application
-of a name is justified by convenience of reference and that this will
-also assist in securing the attention of botanical collectors better
-than a mere allusion to “an unknown palm which may be new.”
-
-
- =Cocops rivalis= sp. nov.
-
-In diameter the trunk appeared to be about midway between the palma de
-sierra (_Acrista_) and the cocoanut, and had the short internodes of the
-latter. The leaves, however, probably remain somewhat smaller than those
-of _Acrista_ to which they might also be said to have a general
-similarity, except at the base where their cocoid proclivities become
-obvious. At a little distance _Cocops_ might be overlooked as _Acrista_,
-while at shorter range it might be mistaken for a very depauperate
-cocoanut. No species of _Cocos_ is, however, known to be native in the
-West Indies except the doubtful _Cocos crispus_ H.B.K., from Cuba.
-
-As a species _Cocops rivalis_ may prove to be similar to _Syagrus amara_
-(Jacquin), which is reported as far north as Jamaica, but it seems to
-have no true generic affinity with _Syagrus cocoides_ Martius, the South
-American palm which is the type of its genus. According to Martius _S.
-amara_ is 30 cm. in diameter, as large or larger than _Cocos nucifera_
-and attains the height of from 20 to 35 meters; _Syagrus cocoides_, on
-the other hand, is a small slender palm with a trunk 2.5–3 m. high and
-5–7.5 cm. in diameter, and with foliage and habit resembling the slender
-and diffuse South American species referred by Martius to _Cocos_, but
-very different from _Cocos nucifera_ or from _Cocops_.
-
-A leaf collected by Sintenis (no. 6061) near Camuy and coming from
-Berlin labeled _Oreodoxa_, obviously did not originate with an arecoid
-palm, but probably belongs with the present species. The region of Camuy
-is but a few miles from Lares, but there is much extremely rough and
-unoccupied country between, so that the danger of extermination appears
-to be somewhat diminished.
-
-
- Explanation of Plates
-
- PLATE 43. _Thrincoma alta_, top of type specimen (no. 848).
-
- PLATE 44.. _Thrincoma alta_, part of leaf and seeds, natural size.
-
- PLATE 45.. _Thrinax Ponceana_, type (no. 1005).
-
- PLATE 46.. _Acrista monticola_, type (no. 761) collected near
- Adjuntas.
-
- PLATE 47.. Fig. 1, _Aeria attenuata_. Fig. 2, _Cocops rivalis_ (left)
- and _Roystonea Borinquena_ (right).
-
- PLATE 48.. _Curima colophylla_, apex of flower-cluster and terminal
- leaf-division, natural size. From type specimen (no. 878).
-
-[Illustration:
-
- PL. 43.
-
- THRINCOMA ALTA
-
- HELIOTYPE CO., BOSTON.
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- PL. 44.
-
- THRINCOMA ALTA
-
- HELIOTYPE CO., BOSTON.
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- PL. 45.
-
- THRINAX PONCEANA
-
- HELIOTYPE CO., BOSTON.
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- PL. 46.
-
- ACRISTA MONTICOLA
-
- HELIOTYPE CO., BOSTON.
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- PL. 47.
-
- AERIA ATTENUATA COCOPS RIVALIS
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- PL. 48.
-
- CURIMA COLOPHYLLA
-
- HELIOTYPE CO., BOSTON.
-]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- This spelling and the adjective use of the name in this form are
- editorial corrections.
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- Of numerous insects distinctive of the more southern palmetto the most
- conspicuous is a longicorn beetle, _Agallissus chamaeropis_ Horn, the
- larvae of which bore in the leaf-bases. The more common _Inodes_ is
- inhabited by the allied genus _Zagymnus_, though another species of
- _Agallissus_ is reported from Texas, where the native _Inodes_ is of
- the smooth-trunked type.
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- =Inodes vestita= sp. nov. Trunk about 45 cm. thick at base, columnar
- or tapering upward; surface rimose, the chinks commonly 5 mm. wide and
- 20 mm. apart. Leaf-bases torn into very numerous, fine, hair-like,
- light reddish-brown fibers, a few much coarser than the others and
- measuring from .6 to 1 mm. in diameter. The epidermis separates into
- delicate membranous shreds, the surface of which is delicately pitted
- and sparsely beset with brownish hairy-margined peltate scales.
- Petiole 10 cm. or upward in width below near where it begins to split,
- 4.5 cm. wide at base of ligule; 3 m. long, concave above; blade 2.13
- m. long, 2.50 m. wide, composed of about 60 segments, the apical
- united more than two-thirds their length, the basal for less than
- one-third; apical segments 4.5 cm. wide, deeply divided above, a long
- fiber terminating both the longer and the shorter ribs.
-
-As shown by the rimose bark this species affords a rather extreme
-instance of the gradual enlargement of the trunk at a distance from the
-growing point. Numerous leaf-bases remain attached to the trunk in the
-greenhouse as they would not do in nature, since they are torn loose
-except for a few fibers at the extreme sides.
-
-Footnote 4:
-
-Dr. Rose also kindly permits the use of the following field notes and
-measurements showing that _Inodes Rosei_ is also a taller and more
-slender tree than _I. Uresana_.
-
- “Trees 6–12 or sometimes even 18 meters high, the long slender naked
- trunk 15–20 cm. in diameter, crowned with a large cluster of leaves;
- petioles 60 cm. or more long, flat on the face, pubescent, but
- becoming glabrate; blade pale green, 8 cm. or more in width, strongly
- keeled, more or less clothed beneath with brown scales on the large
- veins; segments cleft to below the middle, 25 mm. or less wide;
- inflorescence in large branching panicles 60 cm. or more long; fruit
- spherical, 18 mm. in diameter, blackish or dark blue when mature.”
-
-“A very common tree east of Rosario towards Mazatlan, also extending all
-the way from Rosario to Acaponeta; especially common on the low hills,
-and east of Rosario toward the mountains. This species is of
-considerable economic importance, the trunks being used in building
-fences, corrals and huts, while the leaves appear as thatch on a
-majority of the houses of this region.”
-
-Footnote 5:
-
-Hist. Nat. Palmarum 2: 29.
-
-Footnote 6:
-
-Roemer and Schultes treated _Martinezia_ as a synonym of _Oreodoxa_.
-
-Footnote 7:
-
-That the fruits are small and are ripened at one season, as stated in
-the key, was apparent from the size of the seedlings and from other
-circumstances which accorded with the testimony of the man whose house
-stood within a few rods of the largest tree.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
-
-
- 1. Silently corrected obvious typographical errors and variations in
- spelling.
- 2. Retained archaic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings as printed.
- 3. Re-indexed footnotes using numbers and collected together at the end
- of the last chapter.
- 4. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A SYNOPSIS OF THE PALMS OF
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of A synopsis of the palms of Puerto Rico, by O. F. Cook</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: A synopsis of the palms of Puerto Rico</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: O. F. Cook</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: January 14, 2023 [eBook #69783]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A SYNOPSIS OF THE PALMS OF PUERTO RICO ***</div>
-
-<div class='tnotes covernote'>
-
-<p class='c000'><strong>Transcriber’s Note:</strong></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='titlepage'>
-
-<hr class='c001'>
-<div>
- <h1 class='c002'>A Synopsis of the Palms of Puerto Rico.</h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'><span class='sc'>By</span> O. F. COOK.</span></div>
- <div class='c003'>[Reprinted from the <span class='sc'>Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club</span>, 28. Oct., 1901.]</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c004'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_525'>525</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>A Synopsis of the Palms of Puerto Rico</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><span class='sc'>By O. F. Cook</span></div>
- <div class='c006'>(<span class='sc'>With Plates <a href='#pl_43'>43</a>–48</span>)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>The following systematic notes have been accumulated in connection
-with economic studies of Puerto Rico<a id='r1'></a><a href='#f1' class='c008'><sup>[1]</sup></a> palms, and although
-the list is doubtless still incomplete, the printing of it may be justified
-as a means of securing at least provisional names needed for
-reference purposes in connection with other publications of a non-systematic
-character.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The palms may well be considered a very refractory group
-when handled by the conventional methods of systematic botany.
-Difficult at once to collect or to study from dried material, they
-are commonly neglected both in the field and in the herbarium,
-with the result that literature is scanty and unsatisfactory. A very
-large proportion of the descriptions are entirely inadequate for the
-identification of species, and there has been much lawlessness and
-diversity in the application of generic names, as will appear from
-some of the instances discussed below. Difficulties of description
-and classification have also been multiplied by the fact that the
-palms are such peculiar plants that analogies and criteria borrowed
-from other families are often inapplicable and misleading. Moreover,
-the terminology of parts and characters has not been developed
-to the point where the expression of observed differences is
-easy, and available language often fails completely to suggest
-the significance of the characters used. Thus the fibers into which
-parts of the leaf-bases of many palms are resolved afford many
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_526'>526</span>diagnostic characters, for which we have no parallels in other
-groups of plants.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A compensating advantage may be drawn, however, from the
-definite and often very limited geographical distribution of the
-species of palms. Thus, although Puerto Rico is a relatively
-small island, several of the indigenous palms have apparently
-ranged in nature over but a small part of it, and a locality definitely
-indicated would often go further toward establishing the
-identity of a species than much of the descriptive matter prepared
-for this purpose. For the present, at least, the geographical idea
-should be kept uppermost in systematic studies of the palms, since
-it is generally much easier and far more logical to extend the limits
-of supposed distribution and unite supposed species, than to cope
-with the confusion caused by the miscellaneous reporting of species
-far outside their natural ranges.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>From the popular standpoint another serious inconvenience of
-the systematic literature of palms arises from the fact that it is
-based so largely on floral characters that even the botanical traveler
-might need to wait months for the blossoms and then climb the
-trees or cut them down before being able to secure a clue to botanical
-names or relationships. But however necessary refinements of
-formal characters may be in presenting classifications or monographs
-of large groups, more obvious differences may still be
-adequate for distinguishing between the species, genera and families
-represented in a limited flora like that of Puerto Rico. In
-the present paper use is made therefore of obvious external differences,
-not only because of the greater convenience and utility of
-such facts in field study but also in the belief that with the palms,
-at least, the vegetative, habitat and ecological features are often
-quite as important for diagnostic purposes as the more technical and
-conventionalized characters to which botanists are accustomed in
-dealing with other natural orders.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>As will be apparent from some of the following systematic notes,
-the generic nomenclature of the palms is in a condition closely
-comparable to that now known to obtain among the myxomycetes,
-fungi, hepaticae and ferns. Possibly the palms have suffered more
-from neglect and carelessness than other groups of flowering plants,
-but it can no longer be maintained that the practical defects of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_527'>527</span>former taxonomic methods do not exist in the phanerogams as well
-as in the cryptogams, and it becomes obvious that the enactment
-of different nomenclatorial legislation for these two subdivisions of
-the vegetable kingdom would be unreasonable and inconsistent.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The present list records twenty palms from Puerto Rico, of
-which three are introduced and seventeen are supposed to be native
-species. As may also be inferred from many other groups of
-plants Puerto Rico appears to be a rather remote corner of the
-Antillean region, which many types present in Cuba and Jamaica
-did not reach, whether by reason of greater distance from the continent
-or because of an earlier interruption of land communication.
-The native palms of Puerto Rico may thus be said to represent a
-distinctly Antillean or Caribbean series, only <i>Acrocomia</i> and <i>Bactris</i>
-being known to have a wider distribution.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The list of introduced palms, consisting of the date, the cocoanut,
-and the betel, might have been somewhat increased by canvassing
-ornamental gardens, but it does not appear that any other introduced
-species has been put to any useful purpose or has escaped
-into general culture, certainly a remarkable fact when we consider
-the number and importance of the economic palms of other tropical
-countries.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Finally, it may be well to note here that several palms have
-been reported from Puerto Rico which probably do not exist in the
-island; at least their occurrence is not supported by adequate evidence.
-Thus Mr. R. T. Hill, of the United States Geological
-Survey, mentions (Bull. U. S. Dept. Agric., Division of Forestry, 25:
-1899) as occurring in Puerto Rico seven palms, as follows: <i>Cocos
-Mauritia</i>, <i>Oreodoxa oleracea</i>, <i>Cocos nucifera</i>, <i>Martinezia caryotaefolia</i>,
-<i>Mauritia flexuosa</i>, <i>Oreodoxa regia</i>, and <i>Caryota</i> sp., of which
-list only <i>Cocos nucifera</i> and <i>Oreodoxa regia</i> appear to have been
-justified.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The reference to <i>Oreodoxa oleracea</i> is supported by the botanical
-authority of Professor Drude, but the specimens identified by
-him as <i>Oreodoxa oleracea</i> (Sintenis collection, no. 1525) and sent
-from the Berlin Botanical Garden to the National Herbarium and
-to the New York Botanical Garden are not <i>Oreodoxa oleracea</i>,
-but belong to the new genus <i>Acrista</i> described below, while a
-specimen collected by Sintenis (no. 5749) at Aguadilla and sent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_528'>528</span>out from Berlin as an <i>Attalea</i> or related genus is not even a cocoid
-palm but <i>Areca catechu</i>, the betel nut of the Malay region.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The existence of numerous tubercles on the roots of a young
-specimen of the royal palm of Puerto Rico is a fact of biological interest
-and possible economic importance. It was, however, noted so
-nearly at the end of our last visit that further studies were not
-practicable, but barring possible nematodes or other pathological
-causes for the tubercles it appears that we must add palms to
-the Leguminosae, <i>Podocarpus</i>, <i>Alnus</i>, and <i>Cycas</i> as plants which
-have, as it were, domesticated nitrogen-collecting soil organisms.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The field notes, specimens and a considerable series of illustrations
-for publications of the Department of Agriculture were secured
-during two visits to Puerto Rico, the first in November and
-December, 1899, the second in June and July, 1901. The photographs
-are the work of Mr. G. N. Collins.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>Key to the Families</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>Leaves fan-shaped; branches of inflorescence subtended by spathes.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Family <span class='sc'>Sabalaceae</span>, p. <a href='#Page_529'>529</a>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Leaves feather-shaped; spathes few, not subtending the branches of the inflorescence.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Leaf-divisions v-shaped in section, concave above; trunk rough with leaf-bases or
-prominent diamond shaped scars.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Family <span class='sc'>Phoenicaceae</span>, p. <a href='#Page_528'>528</a>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Leaf-divisions inverted v-shaped in section, convex above; trunk smooth or the
-leaf-scars ring-like and not prominent.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Leaf-bases long-sheathing, green and fleshy, finally split down the side opposite
-the midrib permitting the leaf to fall; fruits with fleshy, fibrous or woody
-endocarps.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Family <span class='sc'>Arecaceae</span>, p. <a href='#Page_546'>546</a>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Leaf-bases sheathing only while young, with maturity separating, except at
-the midrib, into a dry fibrous network which must tear or decay before
-the leaves fall; fruits with a stony endocarp perforated by three foramina.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Family <span class='sc'>Cocaceae</span>, p. <a href='#Page_558'>558</a>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>Family PHOENICACEAE</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>This family contains a single genus of old-world palms usually
-associated with the fan-leaved series, and differing from all other
-feather-palms by having the concave side of the leaf segments
-turned upward.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>Phoenix dactylifera</span> Linn. Sp. Pl. 1188. 1753</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>The date palm was probably introduced into Puerto Rico in
-the early part of the Spanish occupation of the island, and isolated
-trees are to be found in many localities especially in the vicinity of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_529'>529</span>the larger towns. The climate is, however, too cool and too moist
-to permit the fruit to ripen properly, and there is apparently no
-inducement for planting in large quantities.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>Family SABALACEAE</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Although forming no conspicuous part of the palm vegetation
-of the island the fan-leaved species seem to be more numerous
-than those of any other family. It is certain also that further species
-remain to be discovered, since in addition to the species listed below,
-young inflorescences supposed to belong to a <i>Copernicia</i> were
-collected by Sintenis (no. 6512) near Utuado, and he also collected
-two other <i>Thrinax</i>-like palms of doubtful identity, one near
-Cabo Rojo and one at Fajardo.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c017'>Key to the Genera of Sabalaceae</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>Leaves depressed in the middle, with a distinct decurved midrib; a slender fiber rising
-from each of the notches which separate the leaf segments.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Inodes.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Leaves flat, midrib rudimentary; segment without alternating fibers.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Leaves chartaceous, naked on both sides when mature, the veinules unequal; fruits
-nearly sessile; seeds smooth, albumen solid except for a deep basal cavity.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Thrinax.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Leaves tough and coriaceous, the lower surface silvery with a persistent, closely
-appressed pubescence; veinules equal; fruits distinctly pedicellate; seeds
-deeply grooved or furrowed.</p>
-
-<p class='c018'>Trunk tapering upward, tall and slender; pedicels short, bracteate at base;
-seeds subspherical, ruminate with deep narrow grooves; surface with a dull
-membranous cuticle.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c019'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Thrincoma.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c018'>Trunk columnar, of equal diameter or enlarged upward; pedicels long, bracteate
-above the base; seed naked, smooth and shining, cerebriform, the surface
-irregular with broad furrows and convolutions.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c019'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Thringis.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h4 class='c017'><strong>Inodes</strong> gen. nov.</h4>
-
-<p class='c016'>In this genus, of which the hat palm of Puerto Rico may be considered
-the type, it is proposed to accommodate the dendroid
-palms commonly referred to <i>Sabal</i>, the type of which is <i>S. Adansonii</i>
-Guersent. The most conspicuous difference between <i>Inodes</i>
-and <i>Sabal</i> is, of course, the fact that the former produces an
-upright trunk while the latter has only what might be called an
-underground rootstock, although such a distinction is quite artificial,
-both groups of species beginning life with a creeping axis
-which becomes erect in one and remains horizontal in the other.
-A much more important difference is to be found in the leaves
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_530'>530</span>which in <i>Inodes</i> have secured strength by the development of a
-midrib, a tendency early abandoned by <i>Sabal</i> in which the midrib
-is rudimentary and the middle of the leaf is the weakest part. The
-leaves of <i>Sabal</i> are adapted for standing erect and avoid resistance
-to the wind by being split down the middle. The leaves of <i>Inodes</i>
-which are held horizontal from an erect axis have attained the
-unique adaptation of a decurved midrib which braces the sloping
-sides of the leaf and effectively prevents the breaking above the
-ligule common in some of the species of <i>Thrinax</i>. It is true that
-leaves of young specimens of <i>Inodes</i> stand erect like those of <i>Sabal</i>
-and do not have the curved midrib, but even at this stage the midrib
-is relatively well developed and the blade opens out to an
-almost circular form instead of occupying an arc of 180 degrees
-or less as in the more strictly flabellate leaves of <i>Sabal</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Further differential characters might be enumerated, such as the
-short ligule and the flat petiole of <i>Sabal</i>. The inflorescence and
-seeds also afford differences, but these points are unnecessary for
-diagnosis, and their proper expression will require careful comparative
-study of the species of both genera, since <i>Sabal</i> is not
-monotypic but includes at least two species from the Southern
-States and perhaps <i>S. Mexicana</i> Martius. Guersent’s <i>S. Adansonii</i>,
-the first binomial species to which the name <i>Sabal</i> was applied,
-is, to judge from the figure, the smaller of our species, while
-Jacquin’s <i>Corypha minor</i> may be the larger. Both species were
-described from hothouse specimens and the plates give no details
-really adequate for identification, but if there are but two
-species to be considered there can be little doubt that Jacquin’s
-drawing represents the larger of the two forms commonly referred
-to <i>Sabal Adansonii</i>, since the leaves are nearly four feet long with
-the mesial divisions united somewhat less than half way up. The
-basal segments are represented, however, as diverging horizontally
-and not obliquely as is usual in the living plants in the greenhouses
-of the Department of Agriculture.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Guersent maintained that he was dealing with the <i>Sabal</i> which
-Adanson had in mind in naming the genus, and made his specific
-name in accordance with that fact, treating <i>Corypha minor</i> Jacquin,
-<i>Corypha pumila</i> Walter and <i>Chamaerops acaulis</i> Michaux as synonyms.
-The relative merits of these names and of <i>Chamaerops
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_531'>531</span>glabra</i> Miller, which Dr. Sargent (Silva, <strong>10</strong>: 38) has resurrected,
-are not likely to be easy of determination, but since the last was
-based on plants grown from seeds which came from Jamaica, it
-seems unwise to use it for United States species to which the description
-is inapplicable. Miller’s name may, however, replace
-<i>Sabal taurina</i> Loddiges which was also founded on a stemless <i>Sabal</i>
-supposed to come from Jamaica.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The species of <i>Inodes</i> are in a similar or even worse state of
-disorder. There is little use, for example, in transferring to the
-new genus the traditional name <i>umbraculifera</i> which was based by
-Martius on the <i>Corypha umbraculifera</i> of Jacquin, but not on Linnaeus’
-species of the same name, which is a native of Ceylon.
-Present taxonomic methods forbid such generic transfers of misapplied
-names, so that the name <strong>Inodes Blackburniana</strong> (<i>Sabal
-Blackburniana</i> Glazebrook, Gardener’s Mag. <strong>5</strong>: 52. 1829) should
-be used instead of the traditional <i>Sabal umbraculifera</i> of the conservatories,
-though the identity and origin of the species still remain
-in doubt.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c017'><strong>Inodes causiarum</strong> sp. nov.</h4>
-
-<p class='c020'>Trunk 45–75 cm. thick at base, 5–15 m. tall, columnar or
-slightly tapering upward; surface narrowly rimose or nearly
-smooth, light gray or nearly white. Leaf-bases splitting into rather
-brittle fibers, partly remaining compacted into long ribbons 5–8
-cm. wide. Leaves about 4 m. long, the petiole subequal to the
-blade, considerably exceeded in length by the inflorescence. Petiole
-3.8 cm. wide, distinctly carinate above near the end; ligule 4.2
-cm. in diameter. Fruit grayish, 9–10 mm. in diameter; seed
-chestnut-brown, finely rugose or nearly smooth, 7–8 mm. in diameter;
-embryo oblique, at an angle of somewhat less than 45
-degrees from the horizontal. Type specimen from Joyua (no.
-154).</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The palm-leaf hats manufactured in large quantities in Puerto
-Rico are made from the present species. The center of the hat
-industry is at Joyua, a small village on the western coast of the island
-some miles southwest of Mayaguez and west of Cabo Rojo.
-Here many hundreds of the palms are growing along the shore in
-a narrow belt of coral sand.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>From the two species of <i>Sabal</i> recognized by Grisebach <i>Inodes
-causiarum</i> differs from <i>umbraculifera</i> in having the inflorescence
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_532'>532</span>much longer than the leaves, while the trunk and leaves are much
-shorter and thicker than in <i>Sabal mauritiiformis</i> a native of Trinidad
-and Venezuela which appears from Karsten’s figure, reproduced
-in the Natürlichen Pflanzenfamilien, to have neither the leaves
-nor the habit of an <i>Inodes</i> though there is no other genus to
-which it can be referred with greater propriety. The diameter of
-the trunk of the Trinidad palm described as <i>S. mauritiiformis</i> is
-given as from 12 to 15 inches, while <i>I. causiarum</i> is often two feet
-or more thick.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>From the Florida palmetto, <strong>Inodes Palmetto</strong> (<i>Corypha Palmetto</i>
-Walter, Fl. Carol. 119. 1788) the Puerto Rico species differs
-most conspicuously in not retaining the old leaf-bases which give
-the trunk of the Florida palm so rough an appearance. The
-cause of this difference is doubtless to be found in the fact that
-as with most other palms the trunk of <i>I. Palmetto</i> grows to full
-size while the surrounding leaf-bases are still alive, but in
-the West Indian species the trunk tapers greatly, especially in
-young trees, and the leaf-bases are torn away by its gradual enlargement
-to full diameter. The existence in southern Florida of
-an <i>Inodes</i> having this last characteristic is a fact of much interest
-recently brought to my attention by Mr. E. A. Schwarz, of the U.
-S. Department of Agriculture. The specific distinctness of this
-palm was impressed upon Mr. Schwarz, not only by its naked
-trunk, different habit, and smaller size (5 m., instead of 10 to 20 m.),
-but also by the possession of a distinctly tropical insect fauna,
-quite different from that of the more northern palmetto with which
-he had previously been familiar.<a id='r2'></a><a href='#f2' class='c008'><sup>[2]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c009'>This new Florida species it gives me pleasure to name <strong>Inodes
-Schwarzii</strong> in honor of its discoverer, in whose opinion of its distinctness
-I have great confidence, although he makes no claims
-to botanical skill. It is confined, as far as observed by Mr.
-Schwarz, to the coral reef formation of southern Florida, the
-most accessible station visited being about one mile south of Cocoanut
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_533'>533</span>Grove on the coral reef of the mainland side of Biscayne
-Bay. In the vicinity of Snapper Creek, <i>Inodes Schwarzii</i> extends
-to the Everglades where it is met by <i>I. Palmetto</i>. It was also
-seen on the Perrine Grant about six miles from Cocoanut Grove;
-it seemed not to occur about Miami but reappeared with the appropriate
-formation and attendant fauna at New River, though
-again absent at Lake Worth. A photograph secured by Mr. H.
-J. Webber (negative 164) on Taby Island near Long Key shows
-an <i>Inodes</i> with a naked trunk and a smaller crown of straighter
-leaves than are normal for <i>I. palmetto</i>. Messrs. Swingle and
-Webber had also remarked the distinctness of the smooth-trunked
-palmetto of South Florida.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A third robust species of <i>Inodes</i> is growing in the conservatory
-of the Department of Agriculture labeled <i>Sabal umbraculifera</i>.
-It differs conspicuously from <i>I. causiarum</i> by the very large leaves
-and by the great development of fine brown fibers which fill all
-the interstices between the leaf-bases, and suggest the name <strong>Inodes
-vestita</strong>.<a id='r3'></a><a href='#f3' class='c008'><sup>[3]</sup></a> Photographs of both the species have been prepared for
-the illustration of comparative detailed descriptions.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><i>Sabal Mexicana</i> has been reported from Cuba, and as it is described
-in Sargent’s Silva (<strong>10</strong>: 43) as having a trunk “often 2½
-feet in diameter,” a robustness equalled only by the Puerto Rico
-trees, the question of its identity was examined. It appears that
-the original of <i>S. Mexicana</i> came from southern Mexico and is a
-trunkless or very slender, rather than a robust species, being only
-about 10 cm. in diameter. The berry and the seed are described
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_534'>534</span>as closely similar to those of <i>Sabal Adansoni</i>. Sargent’s
-<i>S. Mexicana</i> from southern Texas, in addition to the seven times
-greater thickness of the trunk, has a seed nearly 1.25 cm. broad
-with a strongly prominent micropyle. There can be little doubt
-that it is another new species, quite distinct from that of Puerto
-Rico, similar only in the unusual diameter of the trunk, which is
-furthermore described as bright reddish brown instead of white or
-very light grayish as <i>Inodes causiarum</i>. In the view of the apparently
-localized distribution of the species of this genus the
-name <strong>Inodes Texana</strong> would be appropriate for that described and
-figured by Sargent as noted above.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>In addition to the recently described <strong>Inodes Uresana</strong> (<i>Sabal
-Uresana</i> Trelease, Rep. Mo. Bot. Gard. <strong>12</strong>: 79), there is another
-large-seeded <i>Inodes</i> on the western slope of Mexico, a specimen of
-which was collected at Acaponeta, State of Tepic (no. 1528)
-by Dr. J. N. Rose,<a id='r4'></a><a href='#f4' class='c008'><sup>[4]</sup></a> for whom this species may be named <strong>Inodes
-Rosei</strong>. The seeds are of the same size and shape as those of <i>I.
-Uresana</i>, but have the surface much more finely rugose, or nearly
-smooth, with the embryo directly lateral, not subdorsal. The
-branches of the inflorescence are slender and but little over 1 mm.
-in diameter instead of fusiform and thickened in the middle to
-nearly 3 mm. as shown in Professor Trelease’s photographic illustration.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c017'>THRINAX Linn. f.; Swartz, Prod. Veg. Ind. Occ. 51. 1788</h4>
-
-<p class='c016'>In the genus <i>Thrinax</i> were formerly placed all the West Indian
-fan-palms with smooth stems and no midribs, but the gradual discovery
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_535'>535</span>of numerous and diverse species has resulted in propositions
-for subdivision and segregation on the part of several botanists.
-As usual these new groups have been characterized very inadequately,
-and that mostly from the flowers and seeds, and with
-no attempt at establishing correlations of habit or other vegetative
-features without which the classification is likely to remain formal
-and artificial, as well as useless for popular and field study. Possibly
-no ecological differences exist among the <i>Thrinax</i>-like palms
-of other regions, but in Puerto Rico there are, as shown in the discussion
-of the following genus, two well-defined types, one of
-which varies the ordinary short columnar habit by the possession
-of a tall slender and flexible trunk which doubtless enables it to
-compete in a measure with the rapid growth of the surrounding
-vegetation, and which is also obviously adapted for withstanding
-the force of the strong winds encountered in the exposed places
-apparently preferred by palms of this species.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The type of the genus <i>Thrinax</i> is the Jamaican <i>T. parviflora</i>, a
-tree 3 to 6 metres high with the trunk swollen at base. The leaves
-are said to be 30–60 cm. long with rigid lanceolate divisions;
-the stipes longer than the leaves, terete-compressed. The spadix
-is said to be terminal, nearly erect and 60–90 cm. long. The
-tree grows in dry maritime situations in Jamaica and Santo
-Domingo. It does not appear that the original specimens of this
-species have been examined by Sargent or other recent writers,
-but it seems reasonable to use the name for the group of short
-species with uniform albumen and a basal cavity instead of a complete
-perforation. Swartz’s statement regarding the seed “<i>intus
-albus, medio ruber</i>,” in connection with its context “<i>nauco osseo
-fragile tectus</i>” might possibly be rendered “white inside, red between”
-and might refer to the red coat of the seed rather than to
-a red center as commonly inferred. Of course Swartz might have
-cut his seed transversely, but if so he would doubtless have discovered
-and noted the perforation had one existed. Patrick
-Brown’s account of the Jamaica species, cited by Swartz, evidently
-refers to a palm with the habits of <i>T. Ponceana</i>. On the other hand
-the “very slender” palm referred to under this name in the Jamaica
-Bulletin (<strong>I</strong>: 196. 1894) shows greater similarity with <i>Thrincoma</i>.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_536'>536</span>
- <h4 class='c017'><strong>Thrinax praeceps</strong> sp. nov.</h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c020'>Trunk 8–12 cm. in diameter at base, columnar or slightly enlarged
-upward, seldom attaining over 3 or 4 meters in height.
-The leaf-bases split in the middle of the midrib and long remain
-adherent to the trunk. When they finally fall away on older
-trees a rather rough grayish and longitudinally chinked rimose
-surface is exposed.</p>
-
-<p class='c021'>The stalks of large leaves measure 75–80 cm. in length and
-1.2–1.5 cm. in width. The middle divisions of the leaf are 55 cm.
-and under in length and attain a width of 4.8 cm., and in the middle
-of large leaves are united for more than half their length.
-Cross-veinules numerous, distinct in both surfaces but especially the
-upper. The white pubescence or tomentum which clothes the young
-leaves and is especially abundant on the ligule soon disappears,
-leaving the under side glaucous or slightly pruinose.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>This species is described at some length a little later in a
-comparison of generic characters under <i>Thrincoma alta</i>. The type
-specimen (no. 850) was collected on the precipitous mountain-side
-which overhangs the road between Utuado and Arecibo, a short
-distance to the northward from the station where <i>Thrincoma alta</i>
-was obtained.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>What is believed to be the same species was collected in a
-similar situation on the side of a mountain overlooking the town
-and valley of Lares.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c017'><strong>Thrinax Ponceana</strong> sp. nov. <a href='#pl_43'>Plate 43</a></h4>
-
-<p class='c020'>Trunk 5–8 cm. or more in diameter, columnar, or slightly
-tapering or enlarged upward, 1–4 m. high; surface coarsely and
-irregularly rimose longitudinally. Leaf-bases separating into
-abundant rather loose light grayish or brownish fibers. Leaves
-numerous, large, drooping or pendant; petioles 65 mm. long,
-1.5–2 cm. wide; segments attaining 75 cm. in length and 3.5 cm.
-in width, united for half their length. Seed smooth, mahogany-brown,
-5 mm. in diameter. Type specimen no. 1005.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>This species apparently exists in much larger quantities than
-any other yet known from Puerto Rico, being the predominant
-plant on several square miles of territory along the range of dry
-limestone hills which skirt the southern coast of the island, to the
-west of Ponce. Many of the palms are scattered among the taller
-shrubs and trees wherever there is sufficient soil and water to permit
-these to grow and yet not enough to give them exclusive possession,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_537'>537</span>but on many of the drier and more sterile higher slopes
-the advantage is with the palms.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>This abundance of living material deserves more careful
-study than could be given during a very brief visit to this almost
-uninhabited part of the island, but one note of systematic
-interest was made. Several species of <i>Thrinax</i>, of which <i>T. Morrisii</i>
-Wendland may serve as an example, have been described
-chiefly with reference to the relative size of the leaf segments and
-the extent of their separation. If the palms under observation
-near Ponce belonged, as was believed, all to one species, it is not
-only true that the individual <i>Thrinax</i> passes all the stages from
-the narrow and grass-like, almost completely separated segments
-of the very young plant, to the more than half united leaf of the
-large tree, but it also appears to be true that under unfavorable
-conditions a <i>Thrinax</i> may not be able to attain to full maturity of
-size and form but may at the same time produce flowers and seeds.
-In the narrow chinks and crevices of the bare rocks were very
-small, stunted trees, obviously of great age, while but a few feet
-distant a deeper fissure might hold vegetable débris and moisture
-sufficient to nourish vigorous specimens several times the size of
-their less fortunate companions. The stunted trees retain in proportion
-to their size, but apparently with little reference to their
-age, the small deeply divided leaves of young plants and have
-short few-branched inflorescences, another difference of supposed
-systematic importance.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>In <i>Thrinax Ponceana</i> the leaves of well grown trees have the
-middle divisions united to about the middle; the smaller the leaves,
-the more deeply they are divided. A further correlation with size
-is that of the “fullness” of the leaf. The basal sinus is not closed
-by the overlapping of the lateral divisions as in some species, but
-the area is too great for a plane circle and there are one or more
-folds, more numerous and deeper in large leaves. The lateral
-divisions do not lie in the plane of the others but project upward
-or backward nearly at right angles with the plane of the middle
-divisions.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The middle divisions of large leaves may measure 75 cm. in
-length by 3.5 and sometimes nearly 4 cm. in width, while the narrowly
-grass-like lateral segment is only .8 cm. wide and about 30
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_538'>538</span>cm. long. The lowest segment is not divided at the tip but is produced
-into a slender hair-like seta, 6 or 8 cm. long, making it nearly
-as long or longer than the next segment above.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The normal segments are split at the apex to the distance of
-from 2 to 8 cm. and the tips are usually markedly divaricate,
-owing to the fact that the young leaves of this species suffer two
-impressions from the bases of older leaves, one near the middle,
-the other near the end. The pressure causes the curvature of the
-unopened leaves, which in turn causes them to split apart when
-the leaf expands.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Old leaves are smooth and glaucous on the lower side, but in
-the younger state more or less remains of the delicate appressed
-hairiness present on the lower surfaces of the newly opened leaves.
-The lower surface is distinctly grayish and glaucous, but under a
-lens it can be seen that this appearance is due to the presence of
-numerous whitish points (stomata?) among which are scattering
-brownish spots of larger size, the nature of which remains a question.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The free stalks of the largest leaves attain 65 cm. in length
-and are 2 cm. wide near the base, 1.5 cm. near the apex. The
-cross section is lenticular above, but the upper surface becomes
-flat toward the base.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Young unopened leaves are covered near the base, both above
-and below, with a scurfy white tomentum and the margin of the
-ligule has a long white fringe.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>To avoid possible error it seems best to make separate entry
-of the following notes on specimens which might be considered
-quite distinct from the larger and normally mature form of <i>Ponceana</i>,
-but which represent, it is believed, merely a somewhat depauperate
-condition of that species, although leaves exactly comparable
-were not brought home by our party. The specimens in question
-were collected by Sintenis (no. 3500) on the south coast of the
-island near Guanica and distributed from Berlin as “<i>Thrinax</i>
-n. sp.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The leaves are characterized by the narrow straight-sided segments
-which retain the same width (15 mm. or less) for about 11
-cm.; they are united in the middle of the leaf for about 8 cm. and
-the apical tapering part is about the same length. Other species,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_539'>539</span>so far as known, have the segments much broader, both absolutely
-and relatively, and the width is held for a very much smaller proportion
-of the length.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>In addition the midrib is unusually weak, inconspicuous and
-only slightly prominent on the lower side. The small fibro-vascular
-bundles which compose it are sometimes spread apart so that
-there is scarcely an indication of a rib while in other segments of
-the same leaf, and especially at the base, the conditions are more
-normal. The midrib is sufficiently distinct above, though very
-small and fine in comparison with other species.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Lower surface of leaf glabrous or somewhat glaucous, very
-slightly puberulous on the depressed veins near the base. Veinlets
-inconspicuous, mostly subequal, though 4 or 5 are sometimes
-a little larger than the others. Transverse veinlets indistinct below.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Petiole slender, 4 mm. wide, lenticular in cross section; about
-2 mm. thick. Ligule small and weak, short, with a small apical
-mucro.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Fruits 5 mm. in diameter, olive brown, irregularly rugose-coriaceous
-on the outside as though dried from a pulpy condition;
-exocarp with a slightly sweetish taste. Seed bright mahogany-brown,
-darker below, depressed-globose, with a sublateral raphe;
-embryo ascending but more nearly lateral than vertical; conical
-basal cavity extending somewhat above the center, nearly filled
-with a deep red material.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>At the time of our visit in July no ripe fruits of <i>T. Ponceana</i>
-were found on the trees, but a few picked up from the ground are
-apparently indistinguishable from those of Sintenis’ specimen.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c017'><strong>Thrincoma</strong> gen. nov.</h4>
-
-<p class='c020'>Trunk slender, tapering, flexible; wood firm, covered by a
-smooth hard brittle outer shell or bark.</p>
-
-<p class='c021'>Leaf-bases long-sheathing, expanded by the separation of the
-fibers of the side opposite the midrib; petiole strongly flattened
-above the base, prominently angled above and below; ligule large
-and firm, produced laterally to support the outer divisions.</p>
-
-<p class='c021'>Leaf-divisions narrow, separated below the middle and below
-the point of greatest width; texture firm and coriaceous; veinules
-subequal, close together, cross-veinules obsolete. Lower surface
-clothed with persistent closely appressed hairs, the upper coated
-with wax when young.</p>
-
-<p class='c021'><span class='pageno' id='Page_540'>540</span>Seeds with few longitudinal grooves, the surface not polished,
-grayish; embryo subapical.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The generic name alludes to the preference of this palm for the
-summits of crags and the brows of perpendicular cliffs which abound
-in the limestone region of the north side of Puerto Rico.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The tall, slender trunk and other differences between this genus
-and <i>Thrinax</i> are probably to be interpreted as ecological adaptations
-necessary to enable the present palm to compete with the
-vegetation which often surrounds its base, and to withstand the
-winds to which it is commonly exposed. The species of <i>Thrinax</i>
-and other allied genera, as far as known, have the trunk rigid and
-columnar, or even enlarged from the base upwards. When growing
-solitary and exposed they seldom, if ever, attain half the height
-of <i>Thrincoma</i>. Usually, however, they are protected by other
-vegetation or by growing gregariously in thickets.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><i>Thrincoma</i> might be described as a <i>Thrinax</i> which has adopted
-habits of the arecoid genus <i>Acria</i> which grows in similar situations
-in a neighboring part of the island. In addition to the smooth,
-slender, and flexible trunk <i>Thrincoma</i> makes further provision
-against the wind in having fewer, less ample, tougher and more
-deeply divided leaves and like the arecoid palms it also drops the
-old leaves as soon as their usefulness is past, instead of retaining,
-like <i>Thrinax</i>, a large pendant cluster of them. The details of these
-differences are given below in a comparative note on fresh material
-of <i>Thrincoma alta</i> and <i>Thrinax praeceps</i> collected but a short distance
-apart in the lower part of the Arecibo valley along the
-Utuado-Arecibo road. In this region of jagged mountains, <i>Thrinax</i>
-seeks shelter against the walls of perpendicular precipices, while
-<i>Thrincoma</i> challenges the wind and the admiration of the traveller
-by its evident preference for the crags and pinnacles.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c017'><strong>Thrincoma alta</strong> sp. nov.</h4>
-
-<p class='c016'>With but one species known with certainty to belong to the
-present genus the separation of generic and specific characters
-would have little purpose. Data for a specific description are,
-however, contained in the following notes which are retained in
-their original comparative form as better illustrating the generic
-differentiation of <i>Thrincoma</i> and <i>Thrinax</i>, as represented by
-<i>Thrinax praeceps</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_541'>541</span>The trunk of <i>Thrincoma</i> differs in three adaptive particulars
-from that of <i>Thrinax praeceps</i>, <i>Ponceana</i> and similar species which
-are merely columnar with very short internodes and an irregularly
-rimose surface, not smooth and hardened.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>1. There are distinct internodes from 3.5 to 5 cm. in length.
-These indicate rapid growth and would increase the chances of survival
-in the face of competition of quick-growing tropical vegetation.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>2. The trunk tapers gradually from a diameter of 9 cm. near
-the base to 3.5 at the top, and thus possesses considerable flexibility
-in view of its great length, 11 meters, <i>Thrinax praeceps</i> and other
-related types not exceeding 4 or 5 meters.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>3. In order to support the weight and strain of this greater
-height, the texture of the wood is extremely hard and firm, especially
-near the base of the trunk. Externally it is covered by a
-smooth shell or bark of very hard, brittle, dark colored material.
-The fibers of the interior which in <i>Thrinax</i> are merely imbedded
-in a soft pith like those of a corn-stalk are here thickened and
-cemented together, as in tall palms of other groups, into a dense
-hard wood. In the specimen cut by us all but a small area of the
-middle of the trunk was thus hardened, rendering it extremely
-heavy. The wood-fibers of <i>Thrincoma</i> are much coarser than
-those of <i>Thrinax</i>, and there appear to be none of the obliquely
-radial threads which are abundant in the wood of <i>Thrinax Ponceana</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>With reference to methods of leaf-attachment four differences
-may be noted:</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>1. In <i>Thrinax praeceps</i> the leaf-bases split below in the median
-line and remain long attached to the trunk. This adaptation is not
-confined to the old leaves but appears while the leaves are still very
-young, or as soon as they begin to be expanded by the pressure
-of those above them. In the tall species such pressure separates
-the fibers of the opposite side of the cylinder. The short species
-has the outside of the leaf-bases densely tomentose, and the tomentum
-is especially abundant along the edges of the split midrib of
-the young leaf.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>2. The ligule of <i>Thrincoma</i> is notably larger than that of
-<i>Thrinax</i> and continues to lie in the same plane as the blade, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_542'>542</span>becomes brown with maturity. In old leaves of <i>Thrinax</i> the ligule
-stands nearly at a right angle to the blade and remains green.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>3. For leaves of the same size the petioles, not including the
-sheathing base, are longer (75–80 cm.) in the short than in the tall
-species (60–65 cm.).</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The petiole of the short species is of nearly the same width
-(1.2–1.5 cm.) throughout, while in the other it is distinctly broader
-at both ends than in the middle. The enlargement at the ligule is
-abrupt. The base widens gradually to about 2 cm. but is much
-thinner than in the short species. In the upper part of the petiole
-the reverse is true, the cross section of the leaf-stalk of the <i>Thrincoma</i>
-being almost diamond-shape, while that of <i>Thrinax</i> is merely
-lenticular.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>4. These differences of proportion of ligule and stalk are obviously
-correlated with the different habits of the two species. The
-shorter and more robust trunk of the one enables it to withstand
-the strain of the relatively limited exposure to the wind. There is
-also a greater flexibility in the leaf itself, due to its thinner texture
-and to the smaller development of the ligule and adjacent thickened
-area, so that the leaves are often split to near the center. The
-narrow petiole of the tall species affords greater flexibility in the
-lateral plane while strength has been secured by the greater thickness.
-On the other hand the thinness of the base of the petiole
-of <i>Thrincoma</i> reduces resistance by permitting the petiole to be
-twisted when the leaf is opposed to the wind or blown laterally,
-thus avoiding the strain which would come upon the more rigid
-base of the petiole in <i>Thrinax</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The more salient differences between the leaf-blades of the two
-species may be enumerated as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>1. Although the length of the middle segments of the leaves
-of <i>Thrincoma</i> are longer (62 cm.) than those of the other (55 cm.)
-the apparent size of the latter is much greater because they are
-fully expanded while those of <i>Thrincoma</i> remain more or less fan-shaped,
-generally opening less than a semicircle. This decreases
-the lateral expansion, since the shortest divisions are brought to
-the sides, and gives no projection below the ligule where in
-<i>Thrinax</i> more than one third of the foliar expanse is located.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>2. The leaf segments are much narrower (3.6 cm.) in the tall
-than in the short species (4.8 cm.).</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_543'>543</span>3. Practically the difference in width is still greater because the
-segments of <i>Thrincoma</i> are never fully expanded but remain deeply
-channelled, thus decreasing the area of exposure to the wind and
-increasing the rigidity of the leaf.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>4. Resistance to the wind is also reduced in the tall species by
-the separation of all the segments to more than two-thirds their
-length, while in <i>Thrinax praeceps</i> the median segments are united
-more than half way up. In the latter, as in the other members of
-the group, the separation begins at the point of greatest width of
-the segment, but as if to show that the deeply divided leaves of
-<i>Thrincoma</i> are an adaptation, the greatest width is located near the
-longitudinal middle of the segments, 10 cm. or more above the
-bottom of the cleft.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>5. The texture of the leaf of <i>Thrincoma</i> is thicker and firmer
-so that the segments generally remain straight to the tips while
-in <i>Thrinax</i> they often droop after the leaves have become fully expanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>6. The color of the leaves of the tall palm is a very dark green
-while those of <i>Thrinax praeceps</i> are uniformly of a much lighter,
-fresher tint.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>7. The veinules of the firm leaves of <i>Thrincoma</i> are more
-numerous and closer together than those of <i>Thrinax</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>8. The veinules are also subequal in size, giving an appearance
-of uniform pattern, while in <i>Thrinax praeceps</i> from 3 to 5 of
-the veinules of each side of the midrib are distinctly larger than
-the others, the larger veinlets being separated by from 3 to 10
-smaller ones.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>9. In <i>Thrincoma</i> the cross-veinules are scarcely visible to the
-naked eye; under a lens they are still obscure, never equalling in
-size the smaller of the longitudinal veinules, which they seldom
-appear to cross. In <i>Thrinax praeceps</i>, on the contrary, the cross-veinules
-are as large as the finer longitudinal ones; they are obvious
-without a lens and give the fabric of the leaf a peculiar marbled
-effect on account of the fact that they are generally oblique or
-wavy and commonly appear to cross several of the longitudinal
-veinules.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>10. The margins of the segments are thickened in both
-species, and on the upper side there is a groove inside the marginal
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_544'>544</span>rib. In the short species the margin is flat below and does
-not become decurved in drying. In the other the thin edge is
-closely folded under, and on drying the sides of the segments uniformly
-roll under, giving the dried leaves of the two species an
-appearance even more dissimilar than in the fresh state.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>11. The lower surface of the leaf of <i>Thrincoma</i> has a silvery
-white layer of fine closely appressed hairs, all lying parallel to the
-veins and forming a continuous covering. The fibers seem not to
-be attached merely at one end, but along the side. They are firmly
-adherent and are to be removed only by scraping or rubbing; the
-surface underneath is deep green like the upper side, but the fibers
-remain in the grooves between the veins. In <i>Thrinax praeceps</i> the
-lower surface of mature leaves is smooth and glaucous, a comparatively
-very slight hairy covering present in young leaves being
-evanescent, though traces of it are usually to be found in the deeper
-basal grooves. The glaucous appearance is due to the presence
-of numerous white or hyaline points arranged in rows (stomata?).
-The hairiness of one leaf and the glaucous character of the other
-are probably to be looked upon as different adaptations for the
-same purpose—the reduction of transpiration.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>12. The upper surface and the ligule of young leaves of <i>Thrincoma</i>
-are covered with a layer of wax in the form of small plates
-or scales not present in <i>Thrinax</i>.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c017'><strong>Thringis</strong> gen. nov.</h4>
-
-<p class='c020'>Trunk columnar, rimose; wood pithy. Leaves coriaceous
-with equal veinules, silvery below with closely appressed whitish
-pubescence. Fruits distinctly pedicellate, the pedicel with a bract
-above the base. Seed cerebriform, irregular, with wide furrows
-and convolutions; surface smooth and shining. Embryo subapical.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The characters of this genus are imperfectly known, none of
-the specimens being complete. Supposing however, that the association
-is a natural one, we have a genus with leaves and pedicellate
-fruits much more similar to those of <i>Thrincoma</i> than to
-those of <i>Thrinax</i>, and at the same time a columnar, rimose and
-pithy trunk like that of <i>Thrinax</i> and <i>Coccothrinax</i>. The seeds
-appear to differ from those of all related genera in the possession
-of large irregular convolutions. The coriaceous leaves, small
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_545'>545</span>fruits, subapical embryo, and other differences separate this genus
-from <i>Coccothrinax</i>.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c017'><strong>Thringis laxa</strong> sp. nov.</h4>
-
-<p class='c020'>The trunk is columnar or somewhat enlarged upward, about
-3.6 m. high and 12 cm. in diameter. Surrounding its base was
-a dense turf of fine upright rootlets. The bark was rough and
-rimose.</p>
-
-<p class='c021'>The leaves are similar to those of <i>T. latifrons</i>, but smaller, the
-segments being about 70 cm. long by 33 mm. wide. The size of
-leaves is thus about the same as those of <i>Thrincoma alta</i>, but the
-texture is thin and flexible, the veinules being slender and not
-prominent on either side. The pubescence is much thinner than
-that of <i>T. alta</i> and of a silvery-gray color.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A palm collected in December, 1899, at Vega Baja, but without
-fruit (no. 1041). The habit and trunk are not those of <i>Thrincoma</i>,
-but the form and texture of the leaves and ligule associate the
-species with <i>Thrincoma alta</i> rather than with the palms here
-placed in <i>Thrinax</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The columnar habit and protected habitat are reflected in the
-small ligule, 18 mm. across, and the relatively broad petiole, 13
-mm. wide. It appears from the dried specimens of this species
-and <i>T. latifrons</i> that the leaves may have been “full,” or irregularly
-folded, instead of strictly and equally expanded as in <i>Thrincoma
-alta</i>, and the greater width of the segments is a further
-indication of this possibility. The rigidity of the leaf of <i>Thrincoma
-alta</i> can be maintained because the segments are narrow and do
-not open widely.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The soft texture of the leaves of this palm is recognized by
-the natives who use it for making hats and call it “yaray” the
-same name which is applied in this part of the island to <i>Inodes
-causiarum</i>.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c017'><strong>Thringis latifrons</strong> sp. nov.</h4>
-
-<p class='c016'>The leaves, inflorescence and young plants of a palm collected
-by Sintenis (no. 3278) on Monte Calabaza near Coamo are much
-larger and coarser than those of <i>Thrincoma alta</i>. The total length
-of the middle segments of the leaf would be over a meter, and the
-width of the larger divisions is over 5 cm. The thickness of the
-petiole at the base of the ligule is over 10 mm. The form of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_546'>546</span>ligule is much like that of <i>Thrincoma alta</i>, though scarcely as
-large in proportion to the size of the leaf.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The lower surface is clothed with a satiny, appressed grayish
-pubescence somewhat less pronounced than that of <i>Thrincoma alta</i>.
-As in that species the veinules are of equal size, but they are more
-widely separated, and the wavy and usually somewhat oblique
-transverse veinules are easily distinguishable on both sides of the
-dried leaf. There are also slight traces of wax on the ligule and
-in the grooves of the upper surface. The median divisions are
-united for distinctly more than one-third their length.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The spathes and spadix are distinctly larger than those of
-<i>Thrincoma alta</i>, but the fruits are, unfortunately, quite immature
-and contain only shriveled seeds. The pedicels of the fruits are
-2–4 mm. long and bear, usually near the middle, a very slender
-bract 1–2 mm. long.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>This species is apparently distinct from <i>Thringis laxa</i> in the
-larger size and firmer texture of the leaves. It differs in the longer
-pedicels of the fruits, with their longer and more slender bracts,
-from a specimen belonging to the New York Botanical Garden and
-supposed to have been collected by Mr. A. A. Heller, though the
-number (3278) indicates that it may belong to the Sintenis series.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>This consists of a single, short, once-branched inflorescence
-arising from two fibrous spathes. The fruits are about 4 mm. in
-diameter, nearly spherical, distinctly apiculate, deep reddish brown
-in color and borne on pedicels 2–3 mm. long, with a bract 1 mm.
-long or less at or below the middle. The seeds are 2–2.5 mm. in
-diameter; the surface is smooth and shining and light brown in
-color; general shape spherical but with deep folds and convolutions.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>No leaves are known in connection with this specimen, and the
-exact locality is also in doubt. Mr. Heller believes, however,
-that the inflorescence came from a small <i>Thrinax</i>-like palm growing
-in the limestone hills a few miles to the east of San Juan.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>Family ARECACEAE</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>A large family, with abundant genera in the tropics of America
-and Asia, but absent from tropical Africa. The Puerto Rico
-representatives may be recognized very easily by the fact that the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_547'>547</span>leaf crown is supported upon a column of the sheathing bases, a
-character of which the royal palm furnishes a conspicuous and
-ever-present example. Of the remaining genera, one, the betel
-palm of the East Indies is sparingly introduced about towns in the
-western part of the island and may be recognized at a glance by
-reason of the extremely dark green of its foliage. The other two
-genera are native palms confined to uncultivated areas and thus
-seldom seen at close range from traveled roads. The mountain
-palm, <i>Acrista</i>, covers the summits of many of the mountains of
-the island, but <i>Aeria</i> seems to be confined to the range of high
-limestone crags which skirt the northern coast of the island between
-Bayamon and Arecibo.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c017'>Key to the Genera of Arecaceae</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>Trunk tall and slender, tapering from a swollen base; spathes numerous (7); inflorescence
-appearing in the axis of the rather persistent lower leaves, long and slender;
-staminate flowers arranged in rows.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Aeria.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Trunk robust or of uniform diameter; spathes 1 or 2; inflorescence short and brush-like,
-not exposed until the enclosing leaf below it falls away; flowers not set in rows.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Spathe single, the fruits 2.5 cm. long; leaf-divisions upright, very dark green.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Areca.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Spathes 2, fruits less than 1.25 cm. long; leaf-divisions horizontal or oblique.</p>
-
-<p class='c018'>Trunk robust, thickened near the middle; leaf-divisions inserted by twos and
-standing at different angles; inflorescence twice or thrice branched, standing
-close to the leaf-bases.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c019'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Roystonea.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c018'>Trunk slender, of uniform diameter; leaf-divisions at equal distances, horizontal;
-inflorescence once-branched, at maturity 15 cm. or more below the
-leaf-bases.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c019'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Acrista.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h4 class='c017'><strong>Aeria</strong> gen. nov.</h4>
-
-<p class='c016'>A tall slender palm evidently related to <i>Gaussia</i>, but the embryo
-lateral instead of basal, and the pinnae without basal cushions.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Among palms in Puerto Rico <i>Aeria</i> resembles only <i>Acrista</i>,
-from which it is readily distinguishable by the very slender habit,
-the swollen base of the trunk, the much-branched slender interfoliar
-inflorescence, the shorter sheathing bases of the leaves, and
-the numerous spathes.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The embryo of <i>Aeria</i> is located near the longitudinal middle
-of the seed on the side opposite the rudiment of the style, which
-is here located at the base of the fruit instead of on the side as in
-<i>Acrista</i>. The albumen is also uniform, except for a small central
-cavity and the outer covering is fleshy rather than fibrous.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_548'>548</span>The position of the embryo is, perhaps, the most obvious difference
-between this genus and <i>Gaussia</i>, but there are several
-other significant discrepancies. Thus the flowers are arranged 3
-or 4 in a row, very seldom 5 or 6. Three fruits develop from one
-flower only exceptionally. The trunk is of more than medium
-height, and the inflorescence is in reality infrafoliar, for although
-the dead leaf-bases and midribs of the leaves are persistent and
-support the long inflorescence, this condition is not comparable to
-that of the cocoid and other really interfoliar inflorescences.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c017'><strong>Aeria attenuata</strong> sp. nov. <a href='#pl_45'>Plate 45.</a></h4>
-
-<p class='c016'>The tallest of Puerto Rico palms, probably attaining 30 metres
-and upward. The trunk is supported on a mass of coarse roots
-with spine-like projecting rootlets arranged in whorls. The surface
-of the trunk is smooth with very faint annular impressions.
-Near the ground the diameter is 12 to 15 cm. and increases upward
-to about 25 cm. at about 3 m. above the base. Above
-this swelling the trunk tapers very gradually and in tall specimens
-is less than 7 cm. in diameter at the top.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The sheathing leaf-base is only 20 cm. long. The leaves remain
-attached long after the rupture of the open side, but no fibers
-are formed, the edges of the split side being fringed only with
-brown membranous shreds. The petiole is rather short, round
-and rigid and the rachis is prominently angled above.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Segments of a rather firm texture and standing in different
-planes, but all more or less upright or oblique to the rachis, segments
-from middle of leaf 2.3 cm. wide near the base, 3.8 cm.
-long. The segments are set very closely together, especially the
-proximal, and overlap each other in a succubous manner. Fresh
-fruits deep orange in color and of an unsymmetrical oval in shape,
-16 mm. by 12 mm., with a firm, fleshy outer covering 1.6 mm. thick,
-adherent to the seed, the three persistent styles remain of the
-same size and are located at the base of the fruit.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The seed is flattened oval, 11 mm. by 9 mm., with a prominent
-basal tubercle (hilum). The surface is brownish with a few
-shallow impressed lines, but the albumen is white and uniform.
-Flowers and ripe fruit were obtained at Vega Baja in December,
-1899; type specimen no. 1040.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_549'>549</span>The so-called llume palm is a most striking ornament of the
-rugged limestone hills from Vega Baja to Manati and Arecibo.
-At a sufficient distance the slender trunk is no longer visible
-and the crown of leaves appears as if suspended in mid-air, while
-at closer range it does not seem possible that so slender a shaft
-can maintain itself. This very slenderness with the attending flexibility
-is however, an element of strength since it permits the trees
-to bend before the wind while the leaves diminish the resistance
-by straightening out as in the cocoanut. The hurricane of August,
-1899, seemed to have done little damage to these tallest of
-Puerto Rico palms, many of which project for more than half
-their height above everything standing about them. As the trees
-of the rather sparse forest growth of these hills are commonly
-from 12 to 18 metres tall, the llume palms must often attain upwards
-of 30 metres.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c017'><span class='sc'>Areca Catechu</span> Linn. Sp. Pl. 1189. 1753</h4>
-
-<p class='c016'>In the western end of the island the betel palm of the Malay
-region has been sparingly introduced, though the fact does not
-seem to have been reported hitherto. A few were seen in gardens
-about Mayaguez and others in and near San Sebastian. So far
-as we were able to learn, the people do not know the name or nature
-of this introduced species which is apparently planted only as
-an ornament or a curiosity. The form is not unpleasing, but the
-extremely deep, sombre green of the foliage seems almost unnatural
-and imparts a suggestion of artificiality.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Only photographs and fruits of <i>Areca</i> were secured at San
-Sebastian, but Puerto Rico specimens collected by Sintenis (no
-5749) at Aguadilla have already been distributed from the Berlin
-Botanical Garden with the label “Palma Spec. Subtrib. Attaleae.”</p>
-
-<h4 class='c017'>ROYSTONEA Cook, Science, II. <strong>12</strong>: 479. 1900</h4>
-
-<p class='c016'><i>Oreodoxa</i> Martius and more recent authors, not Willdenow.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The history of the generic name <i>Oreodoxa</i> shows that botanical
-writers of the last few decades have been in error in removing the
-two original species and applying it to another series of similar but
-not closely related forms. To avoid further confusion with reference
-to a name which by reason of the conspicuous character of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_550'>550</span>the trees has wide use in popular literature it seems desirable to
-add the following notes on the genus <i>Oreodoxa</i> as originally established
-by Willdenow in the Memoires de l’Academie Royale, Berlin,
-1804, a publication which seems to have been consulted very
-seldom, even by writers on palms.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Spathe universal, univalvate; spadix ramose, perianth monophyllous,
-tripartite below, the divisions ovate, acute, concave;
-petals ovate, acuminate, concave. Filaments six, of the length of
-the corolla; anthers oblong, acute. Style tripartite, shorter than
-the filaments, stigma acute. Ovule, drupe, and seed globose;
-drupe succulent, but slightly fibrous; seed single, cartilaginous,
-nearly smooth, marked with a longitudinal sulcus. In the discussion
-subsequent to the statement of the above characters, <i>Oreodoxa</i>
-is said to be distinct from <i>Bactris</i> in the tripartite style and in the
-absence of the “ordinary three impressions”; it is distinguished
-from <i>Areca</i>, then supposed to include <i>Euterpe</i> and species now generally
-placed in <i>Oreodoxa</i>, in the single spathe, the triple style and
-the hermaphrodite flowers.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The first species is <i>Oreodoxa acuminata</i>, referred by recent
-authors to <i>Euterpe</i> but probably constituting a distinct genus. The
-trunk is erect, cylindrical, very smooth, and attains a height of
-from 15 to 18 metres; the “root” throws out suckers at the base
-of the trunk. The fronds are pinnate, with opposite or alternate,
-very long, ensiform, acuminate pinnae, replicate at base. The
-strongly convolute young leaves form a green apex for the trunk,
-five feet high. Spathes cinereous, folded in at the base of the
-leaf-sheaths at the top of the trunk, univalvate, deciduous; spadix
-erect, much branched, having the appearance of a broom.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The heart of the bundle of leaf-bases, about two feet long and
-three inches thick is eaten as a salad, with oil and vinegar. It is
-also stated that the deciduous boat-shaped spathes serve as reservoirs
-of rain-water which is long retained in the cool shade cast
-by the trees. Birds and beasts, and human natives as well, are
-said to be dependent at times upon the liquid thus stored, since in
-the regions where the palm grows there are at times no other means
-of procuring water. The forests of the high mountain chain of
-Buena Vista in the province of Caracas are the native home of the
-species. It thus appears that in addition to the structural differences
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_551'>551</span><i>Oreodoxa acuminata</i> occupies quite a different place in nature
-from that of the more thoroughly tropical species commonly
-referred to that genus, and the stoloniferous habit also indicates a
-different ecology.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The second of the original species of <i>Oreodoxa</i> is now referred
-to the genus <i>Catoblastus</i>. It is a somewhat smaller tree from 12
-to 15 metres high, with a generally similar habit, and is also stoloniferous,
-but the pinnae are broad, cuneiform and praemorse, or
-irregularly truncate as in the species generally referred to <i>Martinezia</i>.
-The drupaceous fruit is grayish and the pulp is only slightly
-succulent; seed the size of a pigeon’s egg, its exterior brown,
-marbled with numerous veins. In the characters of the spathe
-the arrangement of the fruit and the edible quality of the heart of
-the leaf-cluster, as well as in the formation of lateral off-shoot this
-species is said to be similar to the first.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Botanists are not yet agreed upon the methods of dealing with
-complications like the present in regard to the names of plants,
-but it appears certain that those who do not recognize <i>Oreodoxa</i>
-as a genus distinct from those admitted in the more recent works
-on palms must associate it either with <i>Euterpe</i> or <i>Catoblastus</i>.
-The latter name it would in that case replace, being much older.
-Moreover, unless we are prepared to disregard Willdenow’s statements
-concerning the stoloniferous trunk, the simple spathe and
-the hermaphrodite flowers, to say nothing of many minor points
-of circumstantial evidence, there is no scientific warrant for applying
-the name <i>Oreodoxa</i> to the noble Antillean species with which
-it has been universally associated.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The dried specimens which Willdenow studied were supplemented
-by notes of field observation by a court gardener, who
-was evidently also a botanist of some experience, to whom Willdenow
-refers as his “friend.” The living colors are described
-with considerable detail throughout the entire paper, which renders
-noteworthy the fact that the spathes are stated to be cinereous.
-This is in agreement with species of <i>Euterpe</i> which have
-membranous spathes, but indicates a wide difference from the
-West Indian trees where the spathes are thick and fleshy and remain
-vivid green until they open and fall away.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The name <i>Roystonea</i> has been given to this ornament of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_552'>552</span>Puerto Rico landscape as a respectful compliment to General Roy
-Stone, the American engineer officer who secured the admiration
-of the people of Puerto Rico by his fearlessness and conspicuous
-energy in the Adjuntas road-building campaign which flanked
-the line of Spanish defenses, and whose subsequent interest in the
-improvement of the island will undoubtedly affect its future history.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c017'><strong>Roystonea Borinquena</strong> sp. nov. Plate <i>45. f. 2</i>.</h4>
-
-<p class='c020'>Trunk normally fusiform, 30–60 cm. thick, 12–18 m. high.
-Leaf segments 4–4.4 cm. in width. Inflorescence robust, compact,
-twice branched, the branches numerous and coarse, ferruginous,
-pubescent. Fruits long-oval, yellowish brown at maturity.
-Seeds 8 mm. by 6.3 mm., flattened about the hilum, rounded below;
-wall of endocarp smooth, adherent over a small area.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The royal palm of Puerto Rico differs from that of Cuba in
-having the trunk generally shorter, more robust and more distinctly
-fusiform. The inflorescence is twice branched, with the
-branches more densely clustered, coarser and darker colored than
-those of the Cuban royal palm, <i>Roystonea regia</i>. They are also
-covered with a slightly hispid brown pubescence while Cuban
-specimens are much smoother and more pallid. The difference of
-habit, to judge from photographs of the Cuban species, is most
-apparent when the trees have grown in the open, as when planted
-in avenues or along roadsides. In Puerto Rico, trees which are
-obliged to compete with other vegetation are often tall, slender and
-unsymmetrical. The typical form is shown in our photograph
-(no. 250) taken in the plaza of Juana Diaz.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Martius gives the width of the pinnae of the Cuban royal palm
-as from 8 to 12 lines. Cuban specimens show as much as one
-inch and a quarter, while others from Porto Rico are half an inch
-wider (44 mm.) of somewhat coarser texture and with more widely
-separated secondary veins. The fruits of the Puerto Rico palm are
-a deep yellowish brown when ripe, while those of the Cuban are said
-to become violet or bluish black. According to Martius, the fruits
-of the Cuban species are 6 lines by 4, but dried specimens show
-no such discrepancy of proportions and measure only about 8.5
-mm. by 7.5 mm.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>In Puerto Rico the fresh fruits are also much longer than broad,
-perhaps even more slender than the figures given for the Cuban;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_553'>553</span>when dry they still appear somewhat longer and larger than the
-latter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The seeds of <i>Roystonea Borinquena</i> differ in several particulars
-from those of the Cuban species. In shape they are longer and
-less spherical, measuring 8 by 6.3 by 5.5 mm. instead of 7.8 by
-7 by 6 mm.; the side bearing the hilum is much flattened and
-even slightly concave; the fibers radiating from the hilum are
-longer, and the corner between the hilum and the micropyle is
-evenly rounded, not sharply squared and prominent as in <i>R. regia</i>.
-On the back of the seed the smooth inner wall of the endocarp is
-closely adherent over a small area, while in Cuban seeds this wall
-remains attached over nearly the whole side and is furthermore
-distinctly rugose-coriaceous on the surface, and has a distinct sulcus
-in the median line.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The royal palm is not only the more conspicuous and characteristic
-natural object in most parts of Puerto Rico, but it probably
-exceeds the cocoanut in total economic importance. The most
-useful part is the <i>yagua</i> or sheathing base of the leaf, with which
-a large proportion of the houses of the poorer classes are thatched
-or sided, or both.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The royal palm is one of the wild species which has been
-distinctly advantaged by human interference in natural conditions.
-It is a general fact that outside the climbing species palms are not
-successful in competing with tropical forest vegetation. Originally
-the royal palm and the corozo were probably confined to the
-more rugged slopes of the lower limestone hills where they both
-still retain a foothold in places where the natural growth seems
-never to have been cleared away. But the vast majority of royal
-palms now in existence in Puerto Rico stand on land which has
-been cultivated at one time or another, and where the palms were
-able to secure a foothold before the competition of other plants
-became too strong.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The discovery of root tubercles on a young plant of this species
-has been noted in the introductory statement. These tubercles
-though small in size are very numerous upon the smaller roots.
-In shape they are mostly oval and symmetrical. The larger are
-about 2 mm. in length though our natural-size photograph shows
-several fusiform or clavate bodies from 5 to 10 mm. long and as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_554'>554</span>much as 2 mm. thick. The color of the roots and tubercles is
-white.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The royal palm of Florida is commonly referred to <i>Oreodoxa
-regia</i>, though with very doubtful propriety. Apparently on account
-of its great size, Cooper (Smithsonian Report 1860: 440.
-1861) was inclined to identify it with <i>Oreodoxa oleracea</i> which had
-also been reported from the Bahamas. The inflorescence and
-seeds collected by Curtis on the western borders of the everglades
-(no. 2676) are, however, obviously not those of <i>R. oleracea</i> but are
-much more similar to those of <i>R. regia</i>. The branches of the inflorescence
-are much longer and more lax than those of the species
-of Cuba and Puerto Rico, from which they also differ in the frequent
-development of tertiary branches, in this respect resembling
-<i>Roystonea oleracea</i>. The fruits do not resemble those of <i>R. oleracea</i>
-but are closely similar to those of the other species though somewhat
-smaller and more nearly spherical. Several reliable witnesses
-are on record to the effect that the trees are from 28 to 35 metres
-high and as much as 45 metres has been claimed, while among the
-royal palms of Cuba and Puerto Rico 18 metres is the commonly
-recognized limit of size. Mr. C. T. Simpson, of the U. S. National
-Museum, states that the palms of southwestern Florida lack the
-conspicuous bulge so characteristic in the trunks of the Puerto
-Ricon trees, and that they grow almost in reach of tide-water,
-while the natural habitat of the Puerto Rico species is evidently
-the limestone hills. In view of these differences it seems preferable
-to treat the Florida royal palm as a distinct species, for which
-the name <strong>Roystonea Floridana</strong> is proposed.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Mr. Simpson also informs me that the royal palms seen on the
-islands off the coast of Honduras had the size and habit of those
-of Florida and not the relatively stunted appearance of those seen
-by him in Hayti and Jamaica. This fact is suggestive in connection
-with the popular idea that the palms of Florida are to be
-looked upon as recent arrivals from Cuba. Instead it seems more
-reasonable to believe that the royal palm of Puerto Rico, like the
-species of <i>Thrinax</i> of that island, is a remnant of the flora of the
-time when the limestone hills were keys and hammocks like those
-of southern Florida, and relatively poor in vegetation able to
-crowd out the palms.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_555'>555</span>
- <h4 class='c017'><strong>Acrista</strong> gen. nov.</h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c020'>Trunk slender, of uniform diameter. Pinnae horizontal, appendiculate.
-Inflorescences distinctly infrafoliar; spathes two, the
-outer short, the inner long and slender. Spadix once-branched,
-the branches coarse, tapering. Fruits with stigma lateral, seed
-deeply ruminate, embryo basal.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Related to <i>Roystonea</i>, but differing in the more slender habit,
-the once-branched inflorescence, the basal embryo, and in having
-the leaflets in one plane. The color of the foliage is also considerably
-lighter than that of the royal palm so that from a distance
-the general appearance suggests the cocoanut rather than the
-royal palm.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>There is also some resemblance between the foliage of <i>Acrista</i>
-and <i>Cocops</i>, but the absence of sheathing leaf-bases in the latter
-genus will enable even young specimens to be separated. Moreover
-the leaf-divisions of <i>Cocops</i> are much narrower and those at
-the end of the leaf are not so much shortened as in <i>Acrista</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Further differences from <i>Roystonea</i> are to be found, such as
-the much smaller size and the larger roots, which are tuberculate
-and inclined to become superficial like those of the llume palm.
-The sheathing leaf-bases are not as long proportionately as in
-<i>Roystonea</i>, and there is a distinct formation of fibers, although the
-texture is flimsy. The outer sheaths do not split off and fall away
-as promptly as in <i>Roystonea</i> but several dead ones sometimes hang
-from about the base of the crown. Although the sheath is longer
-than in <i>Aeria</i> the fibers are much better developed, there being
-but a few membranous shreds in <i>Aeria</i>, and no distinct fibers
-at all.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Among the mountains between Cayey and Guayama many
-summits are covered with the <i>palma de sierra</i>, probably in places
-which have never been cleared. A few of the palms follow
-down the steeper uncultivated ravines. From a distance the
-crowns suggest royal palms but a closer view renders the difference
-apparent. There is also no suggestion of the bulging trunk of
-<i>Roystonea</i>. In height the <i>palma de sierra</i> probably does not exceed
-the royal palm.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The tips of leaflets of young leaves are connected by two brittle
-red strands both of which lie on the mesial face, one along the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_556'>556</span>edge, the other near the middle. The tips of the leaflets are of
-the same material and are sometimes persistent as long corneous
-appendices like those of the cultivated <i>Howea</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The generic name <i>Euterpe</i> Gaertner, which is commonly applied
-to a considerable series of American palms related to the present,
-was in reality established for the Malayan genus for which the
-name <i>Calyptrocalyx</i> Blume is now in use, <i>Pinanga silvestris globosa</i>
-Rumphius being cited by both Gaertner and Blume as the
-original, in the one case, of <i>Euterpe globosa</i>, and in the other of
-<i>Calyptrocalyx spicatus</i>. The origin and identity of the seed
-described and figured by Gaertner have not been established, and
-seem likely to remain in doubt; but in describing <i>Calyptrocalyx</i>,
-Blume argued that the generic name should remain with the seeds
-studied by Gaertner and declared that these did not belong to any
-Malayan species but to some of the arecoid palms of the Mascarene
-Islands. This suggestion seems not to have been disposed
-of by Martius or others, but the fact that Gaertner’s fruits showed
-an apical stigma seems to exclude them from the American group
-with which the generic name has been associated.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>In making use of the name <i>Euterpe</i> for Brazilian palms Martius
-cites Gaertner as author of the genus and states that it is of worldwide
-distribution in the tropics. Gaertner’s <i>E. globosa</i> is placed as
-a synonym of <i>E. oleracea</i><a id='r5'></a><a href='#f5' class='c008'><sup>[5]</sup></a> Martius, and Jacquin’s older name <i>Areca
-oleracea</i> stands in the same relation to <i>Euterpe edulis</i> Martius, thus
-rendering <i>Euterpe oleracea</i> Martius a specific homonym. Subsequently
-Martius claims the genus <i>Euterpe</i> for himself and expresses
-doubt whether it is the same as that named by Gaertner, while
-Drude in Engler and Prantl’s Natürlichen Pflanzenfamilien says
-“<i>Euterpe</i> Mart. (nicht Gaertn.).” Martius also admits that the West
-Indian <i>Areca oleracea</i> Jacquin is distinct from the Brazilian species
-of <i>Euterpe</i>, and redescribes it under the name <i>Oreodoxa oleracea</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A further complication connected with <i>Acrista</i> was brought to
-light by finding that specimens collected by Sintenis (no. 1525) in
-the Luquillo Mountains in northeastern Puerto Rico and distributed
-from the Berlin Botanical Garden as <i>Oreodoxa oleracea</i> belong to
-the present genus, together with others collected in Martinique by
-Hahn (no. 805) and identified at Paris. With the last, the local
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_557'>557</span>name <i>choux palmiste</i> is given, the same which Jacquin noted in
-the original description of his <i>Areca oleracea</i> (Stirp. Am. 278. 1763).
-Moreover, it can scarcely be determined from Jacquin’s description
-whether he was dealing with a <i>Roystonea</i> or an <i>Acrista</i> or with
-both, though his claim that his was the tallest palm of the Antilles
-might hold the name for the <i>Roystonea</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>It might then be argued by some that Miller’s species, <i>Palma
-altissima</i> constituted a segregate from Jacquin’s <i>oleracea</i> and that
-the latter name is available for the <i>Acrista</i> of Martinique, whether
-identical or not with that of Puerto Rico. But with a possible
-doubt between the <i>Acrista</i> and the <i>Roystonea</i> there can scarcely be
-a justification for the use of the same name for a third South
-American species or a fourth West Indian.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>As a means of decreasing the confusion it may be suggested
-that as neither the generic nor the specific name of the Brazilian
-palm which Martius called <i>Euterpe oleracea</i> (Hist. Nat. Palm. 2:
-29) is available, the name <strong>Catis Martiana</strong> may be proposed, the
-generic designation having reference to the drooping pinnae characteristic
-of the present species and several of its South American
-relatives.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c017'><strong>Acrista monticola</strong> sp. nov. <a href='#pl_44'>Plate 44.</a></h4>
-
-<p class='c020'>Trunk smooth, 10 to 15 m. high, perhaps taller, from 12 to
-15 cm. in diameter, with distinct ring-like leaf-scars and internodes,
-light brownish or appearing grayish with bark lichens.</p>
-
-<p class='c021'>Leaves about 2 m. long, the pinnae lanceolate, equally spaced
-and lying nearly horizontal, 55 cm. long and 4 cm. broad; the
-surface light green on both sides, with very close parallel longitudinal
-veinlets, but no visible cross veins. The sheathing bases
-are considerably shorter and generally appear somewhat more robust
-than in <i>Roystonea</i>. In protected situations the leaf-bases persist
-and the margins shrivel up and expose a flimsy network of
-fibers. Inflorescences appearing several close together; by the
-falling of the leaves above them they are left several inches below
-the leaf-bases before maturity is attained. Spathes fusiform, long,
-more slender and pointed than in <i>Roystonea</i>. Spadix once-branched,
-1 m. long, 6 cm. in diameter at base, tapering gradually to the
-apex. Branches 23 cm. long and less, the proximal branches
-longest; at first appressed to the rachis, the branches are opened
-out and held stiffly erect by a fleshy turgid cushion on the upper
-(distal) side of the base of each. The branches of the rachis may
-thus be said to be hinged, and with maturity the supporting cushion
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_558'>558</span>dries away and allows them to resume a direction nearly parallel
-to that of the rachis.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The dried fruits of <i>Acrista</i> are grayish brown in color and
-nearly smooth or somewhat coriaceous in external texture; they
-measure 11 or 12 mm. in length and are nearly as wide, being
-slightly oboval in shape. The outer wall is thin and brittle and
-covers a more or less distinct thin layer of amorphous brownish
-material probably representing the pulp of the fresh fruit; in the dry
-state this may adhere either to the outer wall or to the fibers next
-inside. Near the base these fibers are simple, pointed and vertical;
-about half way up they divide and anastomose and are, as it were,
-felted and cemented together to form an oval sac open below and
-closed above. The outer fibers are much coarser than the inner
-and there are sometimes suggestions of three layers separated by
-a dark-brown friable material. A few of the delicate inner fibers
-are adnate to the surface of the seed which is otherwise free from
-its fibrous covering.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Seed 8.5 mm. by 8 mm., slightly lighter in color than the outside
-of the fruit. Surface slightly uneven with obscure veinlike
-ridges and impressions of the fibers of the outer covering. The
-kernel is white, hard and bony, and deeply ruminate, though this
-is not apparent from the outside. The channels are very narrow
-and often radial and straight; they penetrate 3 mm. or less.
-Embryo directly basal; hilum lateral, somewhat below the level
-of the stigma; a short raphe extends about half way to the embryo.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>Family COCACEAE</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>The cocoid palms are a distinctly American group, the African
-oil-palm, <i>Elaeis Guineensis</i> and the cocoanut being the only outliers
-of the family which have been supposed to be indigenous in the
-Old World. South America is the center of distribution and is the
-home of a large proportion of the two hundred or more species.
-Only five genera reach Puerto Rico, and one of these, <i>Cocos</i>, was
-probably not a native of the island.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c017'>Key to the Subfamilies of Cocaceae</h4>
-
-<p class='c020'>Trunks, stems, and midribs beset with sharp spines; seeds foraminate at or above the
-middle.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c022'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Subfamily <span class='sc'>Bactridinae</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c021'>Trunks and other parts unarmed; seeds foraminate at base.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c022'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Subfamily <span class='sc'>Cocinae</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_559'>559</span>
- <h4 class='c017'>Subfamily <span class='sc'>Bactridinae</span></h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Some of the numerous South American representatives of this
-group are nearly smooth, but the three genera known from Puerto
-Rico have the trunks, leaf-bases, midribs and inflorescences beset
-with sharp black spines, and are thus readily recognizable.</p>
-
-<h5 class='c017'>Key to the Genera of Bactridinae</h5>
-
-<p class='c011'>Trunk small, cespitose; leaves separated by long internodes; foramina of seeds
-apical.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Bactris.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Trunk medium or large, solitary; leaves crowded together at the summit; foramina
-peripheral.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Trunk slender; leaf-divisions broad, praemorse-truncate; pistillate and staminate
-flowers intermixed on the inflorescence; exocarp fleshy.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Curima.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Trunk robust; leaf-divisions narrow, sharp-pointed; pistillate flowers below and
-separate from the staminate; exocarp fibrous.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Acrocomia.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h5 class='c017'>BACTRIS Jacquin, Stirp. Am. 279. <i>pl. 271.</i> 1763</h5>
-
-<p class='c016'>The type of this genus, <i>Bactris minor</i> Jacquin, described from
-the vicinity of Carthagena, Colombia, is a small spiny palm with
-creeping rootstocks. The upright trunks are about an inch thick
-and twelve feet high, with long spiny internodes. The fruits are
-fleshy, purple, and about the size of a cherry. Several species of
-<i>Bactris</i> are known from the West Indies though the generic name
-has doubtless been applied rather loosely to all the small spiny
-cocoid palms.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The two following species of <i>Bactris</i> from Puerto Rico described
-by Martius several decades ago seem not to have been secured by
-recent collectors unless it be true, as suggested below, that one of
-them, the simple-leaved <i>B. acanthophylla</i> applies to a young
-<i>Curima</i>. Of <i>B. Pavoniana</i> the narrowly grass-like leaf-divisions
-would be sufficiently characteristic to separate it at once from all
-other palms known from Puerto Rico.</p>
-
-<h5 class='c017'><span class='sc'>Bactris acanthophylla</span> Martius, Palm. Orbign. 67</h5>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Trunk low, spiny; frond simple, the petiole spiny; blade
-lanceolate in young plants, oblong in the adult, cuneate at the
-base and bifid at apex, the margin unequally erose, unarmed;
-rachis and primary veins spiny on both sides; spines bristle-like,
-narrowed at base, those of the petiole black, those of the blades
-fuscous.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_560'>560</span>“In the western part of the island of Puerto Rico, near the
-village of Yrurena, in swampy places on the margins of aboriginal
-forests at an altitude of 400 feet; collected by Wylder, 1827.”
-(Martius Hist. Palm. <strong>3</strong>: 281.)</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A specimen to which the above diagnosis would not be inapplicable
-was collected by Sintenis in the mountain forests near
-Maricao (no. 484). It was distributed from Berlin as a <i>Martinezia</i>,
-together with two other very young plants and a seed to
-which one of these was attached.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The seed evidently did not come from a cocoid palm but together
-with the young seedlings may belong to <i>Acrista</i>. The
-large spiny plant is probably a young specimen of <i>Curima</i>, and
-should these suggestions prove to be correct the specific name
-<i>acanthophylla</i> must be transferred to this genus though whether
-it will replace <i>colophylla</i> or not is not to be determined until it can
-be ascertained that the Maricao species is the same as that here
-described from Bayamon.</p>
-
-<h5 class='c017'><span class='sc'>Bactris Pavoniana</span> Martius, Palm. Orbign. 70</h5>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Frond pinnate, rachis with rather long spines and black bristles:
-linear acuminate, about equally distant, the terminal united,
-setose-ciliate, glaucous below and with a sparse whitish down.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Puerto Rico; Pavon.” (Martius, Hist. Pal. <strong>3</strong>: 282.)</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Grisebach has reported this species from Antigua and has redescribed
-it as follows, presumably from the Antigua specimens.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“‘Trunk low’; <i>leaves pinnatisect: segments numerous, grass-like,
-linear-acuminate</i> or the uppermost broader by cohesion, glaucous
-and minutely puberulous or glabrescent beneath, approximate,
-subequidistant, reduplicate at the base: <i>rachis armed with
-very long black prickles</i> and rare bristles, keeled above.—Flowers
-unknown; leaf segments (in our specimens, which are cut off,
-perhaps about the middle of the rachis) more than 30–jugal, 3‴–6‴
-distant, 12″–8″ long, 4‴–2‴ broad, superior gradually
-shorter, the uppermost cohering ones sometimes 6‴–8‴ broad:
-prickles scattered or clustered, slender, the greatest 2″ long.
-Hab. Antigua: <i>Wullschl.</i>, Blubber valley; [Portorico].” (Grisebach,
-Fl. Brit. W. I., 520. 1864.)</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_561'>561</span>
- <h5 class='c017'><strong>Curima</strong> gen. nov.</h5>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c020'>Trunk rather slender, internodes armed with scattered slender
-spines. Leaves and inflorescence also spiny, especially on the
-proximal parts. Pinnae numerous, strap-shaped, praemorse-truncate,
-imperfectly separated near the ends of the leaves. Inflorescence
-rather slender, once-branched; pistillate flowers mostly
-located near the bases of the branches. Fruit drupaceous, exocarp
-fleshy, not fibrous; foramina peripheral.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A palm related to <i>Acrocomia</i> and to the genera commonly
-grouped under the name <i>Martinezia</i>, to which <i>Aiphanes</i> and <i>Marara</i>
-are generally referred as synonyms. Reasons why none of these
-names appears available for the Puerto Rico species are given below.
-The characters of the fruit, with foramina near the middle, seem
-to indicate that <i>Curima</i> is not remotely related to <i>Acrocomia</i>, from
-which it differs superficially in the more slender habit, the truncate
-or praemorse leaves and the very long and lax inflorescence.</p>
-
-<h5 class='c017'><strong>Curima colophylla</strong> sp. nov. <a href='#pl_46'>Plate 46.</a></h5>
-
-<p class='c016'>The solitary trunk rises from a mass of spiny roots somewhat
-smaller than those of the llume palm (<i>Aeria</i>). Diameter of trunk
-from 1–1.5 cm., often slightly thinner near the ground, though
-showing no such tendency to bulge as appears in <i>Roystonea</i>, <i>Aeria</i>
-and <i>Acrocomia</i>. The surface of the internodes is rather sparingly
-provided with needle-like spines smaller and more slender than
-those of <i>Acrocomia</i>. On old trunks the spines are often more or
-less completely absent.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Leaves 2.13–2.5 m. long, with from 30 to 40 pairs of strap-shaped
-praemorse-truncate divisions shorter and broader as the
-end of the leaf is approached, and with a terminal undivided
-area several inches wide. There is no apparent tendency toward
-the arrangement of the leaf-divisions in clusters as in <i>Martinezia
-caryotaefolia</i> and other allied species.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The base, rachis, midribs and even the surfaces of the pinnae
-are beset with coarse black or deep red spines which are closely
-appressed when young and become erect as soon as the surfaces
-are exposed, all the parts except the spines and the upper surfaces
-of the leaf-division being covered at first with a light grayish or
-brownish scurfy coating which gradually disappears.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_562'>562</span>The inner spathe is narrowly fusiform and about 1 m. long.
-It splits to the level of the outer spathe revealing the spadix and
-its extremely spiny peduncle. The flowers are greenish cream
-colored in mass, paler and not so yellow as in <i>Acrocomia</i>. The
-pistillate flowers are relatively very few and located near the base
-of the simple branches.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The cherry-like fruits are dull orange or brick red with rather
-dry fleshy or oily exocarp having a rather mealy though distinctly
-acid flavor, but no really unpleasant taste. This fleshy covering
-is only very slightly fibrous, and that near the base; the seeds fall
-off very easily sometimes leaving the base of the exocarp attached
-to the fruiting branch. The nut is about 12 mm. in greatest or
-transverse diameter and about 10 mm. high, while the fresh fruit
-is 14–16 mm. through and 12 or 13 mm. thick. The surface is
-deeply and irregularly pitted and marked with three radially fibrous
-striate foveolae.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>It is perhaps too soon to assert that there is only one species
-of the present genus in Puerto Rico. The trees certainly differ
-considerably in size though not more than the cocoanut and others.
-There is also a noticeable difference in the abundance of spines.
-Such apparent variability may, however, be due to age, the older
-trees tending to become less densely beset with the brittle black
-spines which are often conspicuous on young specimens.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The specimens (no. 878) and photographs on which this genus
-and species were based were secured on the limestone hills near the
-wagon road between Bayamon and Toa Baja where the present
-palm is not uncommon.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><i>Curima</i> appeared to be especially abundant about Bayamon
-but is probably rather generally distributed in the limestone hills
-of the island, perhaps also on other soils. A few trees were seen
-along the road between Utuado and Lares, and numerous others
-between Isolina and Manati. Sintenis collected specimens of what
-is apparently the same species near Juncos and Hato Grande,
-and at Maricao young specimens discussed under <i>Bactris acanthophylla</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>As far as Puerto Rico is concerned, this palm is very easily
-recognized by means of the curiously truncate leaf-divisions, the
-outer margins of which appear as though accidentally injured or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_563'>563</span>eaten away by caterpillars. This feature is, however, shared with
-numerous other West Indian and South American palms, though
-apparently only one, the so-called <i>grigri</i> palm of Martinique
-can be referred to the present genus with confidence. For this the
-name <strong>Curima corallina</strong> (<i>Martinezia corallina</i> Martius, Hist. Nat.
-Palm. 3: 284) appears to be correct, although Martius places
-Gaertner’s much older <i>Bactris minima</i> as a synonym for his
-species. Gaertner, however, was making a second attempt at renaming
-Jacquin’s <i>Bactris minor</i>, having previously misplaced that
-name in connection with a West Indian <i>Acrocomia</i>, probably the
-same to which Jacquin had already supplied the name <i>Cocos aculeatus</i>.
-Thus it is possible to treat <i>Bactris minima</i> Gaertner as a
-synonym of <i>Bactris minor</i> Jacquin and the restoration of Gaertner’s
-inappropriate name for the <i>Curima</i> is thus avoided.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>With this preliminary description we may return to the consideration
-of the generic names <i>Martinezia</i>, <i>Aiphanes</i> and <i>Marara</i>
-which other writers have applied to relatives of the present palm
-or treated as synonyms. <i>Martinezia</i> was described by Ruiz and
-Pavon (Prodr. Flor. Per. et Chil. 148. 1794) for five Peruvian
-palms, but it was amended by Martius (Hist. Nat. Palm. <strong>3</strong>:
-283) by the removal of all the original species and the substitution
-of a new set. Of the original species studied by Ruiz and Pavon
-only two, <i>M. ciliata</i> and <i>M. abrupta</i> were mentioned in connection
-with the original description of the genus, and this because they
-offered exceptions to the generic characters. If these were to be
-excluded for this reason from those among which the type is to
-be sought, the name <i>Martinezia</i> must go with the subsequently
-published <i>M. ensiformis</i>, now referred to <i>Euterpe</i><a id='r6'></a><a href='#f6' class='c008'><sup>[6]</sup></a> or with <i>M.
-lanceolata</i> and <i>M. linearis</i>, now placed in <i>Chamaedorea</i>. If we
-hold to the first species, <i>M. ciliata</i>, <i>Martinezia</i> is probably a synonym
-of <i>Bactris</i>. The second species, <i>M. abrupta</i>, has escaped
-Martius and the Index Kewensis, in which a sixth name <i>M. interrupta</i>
-is the only one by Ruiz and Pavon now credited as being a
-genuine <i>Martinezia</i>. Thus by the method of elimination <i>Martinezia</i>
-would according to current classification replace <i>Chamaedorea</i>
-while by the method of types it would stand as a synonym of <i>Bactris</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The genus <i>Aiphanes</i> was established by Willdenow on <i>Aiphanes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_564'>564</span>aculeata</i>, a spiny palm from the mountains about Caracas. The
-trunk is said to be erect, ten meters high, subcylindrical and very
-spiny. The leaves are about 1.6 m. long, with four pairs of remote,
-broad, cuneate, praemorse pinnae, strongly whitish pubescent
-on the under side; the petiole is also beset with spines. Spathe
-acuminate at both ends, aculeate on the outside, smooth
-within, opening longitudinally; spadix 4.5 dm. long, composed
-of cylindrical spikes placed opposite. Flowers hermaphrodite;
-calyx trifid, the divisions acute; petals acuminate; filaments 6,
-subulate, anthers rounded, style as long as the stamens, stigma
-trifid; drupe globose, the fleshy farinaceous pulp rather tasteless,
-though edible; nut hard, of the size of a musket ball, unilocular,
-black, furrowed with a large number of grayish grooves,
-of which three are always much larger than the others. The kernel
-is white, very sweet, and very good to eat. <i>Aiphanes</i> grows
-in the ravines and forests of the high mountains of the district of
-Caucagua, province of Caracas, Venezuela and requires a fertile,
-somewhat moist soil. It flowers and fruits in July.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>From the above it appears that <i>Aiphanes</i> is a genus quite different
-from <i>Curima</i>, approaching some of the South American
-species of <i>Bactris</i> much more closely than it resembles the Puerto
-Rico tree.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The genus <i>Marara</i> was based by Karsten (Linnaea, <strong>28</strong>: 389)
-on <i>M. bicuspidata</i> from Colombia, a cespitose palm having a trunk
-7 meters high and 10 cm. in diameter, clothed with black spines 6
-to 8 mm. long. The leaves are 125 cm. long with from 60 to 80
-pairs of cuneate pinnules which measure 3 dm. in length and 15
-cm. in width, and are clustered in sixes or eights. This appears
-to be a very extreme development of the leaf-arrangement
-seen in the cultivated palm commonly called <i>Martinezia caryotaefolia</i>
-where the leaflets are distinctly clustered, but by no means
-so crowded as must be the case when on the side of a leaf 125
-cm. long are leaflets with an aggregate width of 10–13 m.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The palm commonly cultivated in conservatories as <i>Martinezia
-caryotaefolia</i> is obviously allied to <i>Curima</i>, perhaps more closely
-than to either <i>Aiphanes</i> or <i>Marara</i>, but in addition to the clustered
-pinnules it has a more slender habit, especially apparent in the
-long internodes and the more lax inflorescence. This difference
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_565'>565</span>in habit is also evidently correlated with the fact that the leaf-bases
-do not become deeply gibbous and obliquely inclined from
-the trunk as in <i>Curima</i> but remain closely sheathing. Moreover,
-the upper side of the leaf-stalk which in the Puerto Rico palm is
-deeply channeled and has lateral corners sharp or torn into fibers
-nearly to the insertion of the lowest pinnae is in the conservatory
-species nearly cylindrical for a long distance below the pinnae,
-and has long spines on the upper side as well as on the lower.
-It is as though the ligule were located in <i>Curima</i> near the insertion
-of the lowest pinnae while in the other form it remains close
-to the trunk, with a cylindrical section intercalated to reach to
-where the pinnae begin. Apparently we are dealing with still
-another generic group for which the name <strong>Tilmia</strong> would not
-be inappropriate in allusion to the shorn and disheveled appearance
-which it shares with <i>Curima</i>. The species studied are <strong>Tilmia caryotaefolia</strong>
-(<i>Martinezia caryotaefolia</i> H.B.K. Nov. Gen. et Sp. <strong><span class='fss'>I</span></strong>: 305.
-<i>pl. 699</i>) in the National Botanic Garden and <strong>T. disticha</strong> (<i>Martinezia
-disticha</i> Linden, Cat. 32. 1875).</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The seeds of <i>Tilma caryotaefolia</i> are like those of <i>Curima</i>, but
-considerably larger, rounder, and much smoother. The foramina
-are peripheral, but are much smaller and more shallow, those of
-<i>Curima</i> being surrounded, as it were, by a prominent rim which
-adds somewhat to the apparent width of the seed. In both genera
-the nuts are unsymmetrical, the side which has the largest foramen
-being distinctly larger than the others and in <i>Curima</i> the irregularly
-pitted sculpture is coarser.</p>
-
-<h5 class='c017'>ACROCOMIA Martius, Hist. Nat. Palm. <strong>2</strong>: 66</h5>
-
-<p class='c016'>A genus of palms distributed through tropical America from
-Mexico to Cuba and Paraguay. All the species are of stocky,
-compact growth, with a dense crown of numerous leaves. The
-trunk and the leaf-stalks are usually armed with strong, sharp
-spines, sometimes several inches long.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Although totally different on close inspection this genus has in
-Puerto Rico a superficial resemblance to the royal palm, which
-often deceives travelers. The similarity lies mostly in the two facts
-that both the royal and corozo palms are more robust and stiffly
-erect than the cocoanut, and that the leaf-divisions instead of lying
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_566'>566</span>horizontal and in one plane are tilted at different angles to the midrib,
-thus giving the foliage seen in the mass a somewhat unkempt
-appearance in comparison with the cocoanut.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>In distinguishing the corozo palm from the royal palm when
-seen at a distance so great that the spines of the one and the
-columnar green leaf-sheaths of the other can not be seen, recourse
-may be had to the following facts. The leaf crown of the corozo
-palm is much rounder, thicker and more compact than that of the
-royal palm, since it contains many more leaves, and these persist
-much longer. The royal palm can also be known by the unopened
-leaves which project straight upward like flag-poles or
-lightning-rods, while in <i>Acrocomia</i> the leaves open as they are
-pushed out and seldom offer a suggestion of the spire-like effect.</p>
-
-<h5 class='c017'><strong>Acrocomia media</strong> sp. nov.</h5>
-
-<p class='c020'>Trunk 20–30 cm. in diameter near the base, thickened above
-to 50 cm. or less; height commonly about 6–8 m. rarely exceeding
-10 m. Surface of trunk with slight annular impressions. Internodes
-armed with slender black spines, the larger 10–15 cm. long,
-mostly confined to the lower half of the internodes. Fruit green, becoming
-yellowish, the husk firmly fibrous, inedible; about 35 mm.
-in diameter, nearly spherical in shape, with a distinct apical papilla.
-Kernel 25 mm. wide by 22 mm. long; width of the cavity 18 mm.
-The type specimen was collected near Ponce (photograph no. 255).</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The <i>Acrocomia</i> of Puerto Rico seems to differ from <i>A. aculeata</i>
-(Jacquin) in its robust habit and somewhat bulging trunk, while it
-is less stout and less swollen than <i>A. fusiformis</i> (Swartz). The
-name <i>Acrocomia lasiospatha</i>, although used by Martius and Grisebach
-has no warrant for supplanting <i>fusiformis</i> of Swartz, which must
-be preferred for the Jamaica species with the thick, swollen trunk.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>In Jamaica there seem to be at least two species of <i>Acrocomia</i>,
-the larger of which is called the “great macaw” palm, and is described
-as having a fusiform trunk as thick as a man’s body.
-What is presumably the same species occurs in Cuba as shown by
-a photograph from the vicinity of La Gloria on the north coast.
-The greatest diameter of the trunk is three or four times the thickness
-near the base. In Puerto Rico no trees approximating these
-proportions were observed, the greatest amount of swelling probably
-not reaching twice the diameter below. According to Maza
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_567'>567</span><i>Acrocomia lasiospatha</i> grows wild in Cuba and is known under the
-name “coroja de Jamaica.” Swartz described his <i>Cocos fusiformis</i>
-on the supposition that it was distinct from the <i>Cocos aculeatus</i> of
-Jacquin, from Martinique, by reason of the fusiform trunk. The
-species was, nevertheless, reduced by Martius to his South American
-<i>Acrocomia sclerocarpa</i>, perhaps because the spathe is said to
-be spiny, a character probably subject to great variation.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Jacquin’s name <i>Acrocomia aculeata</i> (1763) must, it seems, be
-used for the West Indian palm placed by Martius under his <i>A.
-sclerocarpa</i>, which is to be maintained, if at all, as a South American
-species. Jacquin declares that the habit of his tree is similar
-to that of <i>Cocos nucifera</i> and <i>Cocos amara</i> (<i>Syagrus</i>), and his
-figure shows a tall straight trunk tapering slightly upward, with
-no tendency to bulge. The spines of the trunk are few and the
-midribs are aculeate on both sides. The drawing of the fruit is
-37 mm. long by 41 mm. wide and has a broad conic papilla
-at apex. As indicated above, such a tree was not noticed in Puerto
-Rico where all the corozo palms are distinctly, though slightly,
-thicker some distance above the base, though apparently never
-equaling <i>A. fusiformis</i> in this respect.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c017'>Subfamily <span class='sc'>Cocinae</span></h4>
-
-<h5 class='c017'>Key to the Genera of Cocinae</h5>
-
-<p class='c011'>Trunk distinctly ringed, rising from an inclined swollen base; leaves numerous, many
-of the lower drooping or pendant, the divisions many and narrow; fruits very large,
-borne continuously.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Cocos.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Trunk nearly smooth, straight and columnar; leaves fewer, not becoming pendant, divisions
-less numerous and broader; fruits small, borne at one time and ripening together.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Cocops.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h5 class='c017'><span class='sc'>Cocos nucifera</span> Linn. Sp. Pl. 1188. 1753</h5>
-
-<p class='c016'>The cocoa-palm is largely confined to the neighborhood of
-the coast, but is occasionally planted in small numbers in the interior
-districts, though it generally does not thrive in such situations
-especially on the north side of the island. On the drier
-southern slope of Puerto Rico, which is avoided by the royal palm,
-the cocoanut seems to thrive better, when it has once become established.
-Cocoanuts are mostly gathered while still green, for
-the sake of the milk or, as it is there called, the water (<i>coco de
-agua</i>) a popular beverage wherever obtainable. Although the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_568'>568</span>local consumption of nuts for this purpose is considerable it is
-largely confined to the towns of the coast region. Thus it may
-be said that in Puerto Rico the cocoa-palm affords a luxury rather
-than a necessity, and that it is exceeded in economic importance
-by the royal palm.</p>
-
-<h5 class='c017'><strong>Cocops</strong> gen. nov.</h5>
-
-<p class='c016'>In a valley on the road between Lares and San Sebastian several
-young palms were noticed with leaves similar to the cocoanut,
-but smaller and finer. Finally one mature specimen was found,
-with both trunk and leaves strongly suggesting the cocoanut, but
-much smaller. The leaves are light green, the leaflets in one
-plane, and the fibers separating from the narrow base of the leaf.
-The fibers are few and flimsy, but like those of the cocoanut and
-other South American species of <i>Cocos</i>. The palm stood within a
-few feet of a small permanent brook, down which the seeds had
-evidently been carried and there were several young palms along
-the bank. The native living in an adjacent house could give us no
-name except <i>palmilla</i>, and seemed to think that none was necessary
-since the tree does not yield <i>yagua</i> or anything else of use.
-Its early extermination is therefore not unlikely.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>In the absence of flowers and fruit<a id='r7'></a><a href='#f7' class='c008'><sup>[7]</sup></a> the relationships of the present
-genus cannot be ascertained nor its validity satisfactorily established.
-There seems, however, to be no reason for including the
-species in any of the genera known from Puerto Rico or other parts
-of the West Indies, and to associate it with Central and South
-American types would be a still less warrantable procedure.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>It is also believed that under the present circumstances the application
-of a name is justified by convenience of reference and that
-this will also assist in securing the attention of botanical collectors
-better than a mere allusion to “an unknown palm which may
-be new.”</p>
-
-<h5 class='c017'><strong>Cocops rivalis</strong> sp. nov.</h5>
-
-<p class='c016'>In diameter the trunk appeared to be about midway between
-the palma de sierra (<i>Acrista</i>) and the cocoanut, and had the short
-internodes of the latter. The leaves, however, probably remain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_569'>569</span>somewhat smaller than those of <i>Acrista</i> to which they might
-also be said to have a general similarity, except at the base where
-their cocoid proclivities become obvious. At a little distance
-<i>Cocops</i> might be overlooked as <i>Acrista</i>, while at shorter range it
-might be mistaken for a very depauperate cocoanut. No species
-of <i>Cocos</i> is, however, known to be native in the West Indies except
-the doubtful <i>Cocos crispus</i> H.B.K., from Cuba.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>As a species <i>Cocops rivalis</i> may prove to be similar to <i>Syagrus
-amara</i> (Jacquin), which is reported as far north as Jamaica, but it
-seems to have no true generic affinity with <i>Syagrus cocoides</i> Martius,
-the South American palm which is the type of its genus.
-According to Martius <i>S. amara</i> is 30 cm. in diameter, as large or
-larger than <i>Cocos nucifera</i> and attains the height of from 20 to 35
-meters; <i>Syagrus cocoides</i>, on the other hand, is a small slender
-palm with a trunk 2.5–3 m. high and 5–7.5 cm. in diameter, and
-with foliage and habit resembling the slender and diffuse South
-American species referred by Martius to <i>Cocos</i>, but very different
-from <i>Cocos nucifera</i> or from <i>Cocops</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A leaf collected by Sintenis (no. 6061) near Camuy and
-coming from Berlin labeled <i>Oreodoxa</i>, obviously did not originate
-with an arecoid palm, but probably belongs with the present
-species. The region of Camuy is but a few miles from Lares,
-but there is much extremely rough and unoccupied country between,
-so that the danger of extermination appears to be somewhat
-diminished.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c023'>Explanation of Plates</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c024'><span class='sc'><a href='#pl_43'>Plate 43.</a></span> <i>Thrincoma alta</i>, top of type specimen (no. 848).</p>
-
-<p class='c021'><span class='sc'><a href='#pl_44'>Plate 44.</a>.</span> <i>Thrincoma alta</i>, part of leaf and seeds, natural size.</p>
-
-<p class='c021'><span class='sc'><a href='#pl_45'>Plate 45.</a>.</span> <i>Thrinax Ponceana</i>, type (no. 1005).</p>
-
-<p class='c021'><span class='sc'><a href='#pl_46'>Plate 46.</a>.</span> <i>Acrista monticola</i>, type (no. 761) collected near Adjuntas.</p>
-
-<p class='c021'><span class='sc'><a href='#pl_47'>Plate 47.</a>.</span> Fig. 1, <i>Aeria attenuata</i>. Fig. 2, <i>Cocops rivalis</i> (left) and <i>Roystonea
-Borinquena</i> (right).</p>
-
-<p class='c021'><span class='sc'><a href='#pl_48'>Plate 48.</a>.</span> <i>Curima colophylla</i>, apex of flower-cluster and terminal leaf-division,
-natural size. From type specimen (no. 878).</p>
-<div id='pl_43' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_043.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='right'><span class='sc'>Pl. 43.</span></span><br><br>THRINCOMA ALTA<br><br>HELIOTYPE CO., BOSTON.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id='pl_44' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_044.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='right'><span class='sc'>Pl. 44.</span></span><br><br>THRINCOMA ALTA<br><br>HELIOTYPE CO., BOSTON.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id='pl_45' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_045.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='right'><span class='sc'>Pl. 45.</span></span><br><br>THRINAX PONCEANA<br><br>HELIOTYPE CO., BOSTON.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id='pl_46' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_046.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='right'><span class='sc'>Pl. 46.</span></span><br><br>ACRISTA MONTICOLA<br><br>HELIOTYPE CO., BOSTON.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id='pl_47' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_047.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='right'><span class='sc'>Pl. 47.</span></span><br><br><span class='left'>AERIA ATTENUATA</span> <span class='right'>COCOPS RIVALIS</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id='pl_48' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_048.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='right'><span class='sc'>Pl. 48.</span></span><br><br>CURIMA COLOPHYLLA<br><br>HELIOTYPE CO., BOSTON.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c025'>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c009'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. This spelling and the adjective use of the name in this form are editorial corrections.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
-<p class='c009'><a href='#r2'>2</a>. Of numerous insects distinctive of the more southern palmetto the most conspicuous
-is a longicorn beetle, <i>Agallissus chamaeropis</i> Horn, the larvae of which bore in
-the leaf-bases. The more common <i>Inodes</i> is inhabited by the allied genus <i>Zagymnus</i>,
-though another species of <i>Agallissus</i> is reported from Texas, where the native <i>Inodes</i>
-is of the smooth-trunked type.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
-<p class='c009'><a href='#r3'>3</a>. </p>
-<p class='c021'><strong>Inodes vestita</strong> sp. nov. Trunk about 45 cm. thick at base, columnar or tapering
-upward; surface rimose, the chinks commonly 5 mm. wide and 20 mm. apart. Leaf-bases
-torn into very numerous, fine, hair-like, light reddish-brown fibers, a few much
-coarser than the others and measuring from .6 to 1 mm. in diameter. The epidermis
-separates into delicate membranous shreds, the surface of which is delicately pitted and
-sparsely beset with brownish hairy-margined peltate scales. Petiole 10 cm. or upward
-in width below near where it begins to split, 4.5 cm. wide at base of ligule; 3 m. long,
-concave above; blade 2.13 m. long, 2.50 m. wide, composed of about 60 segments, the
-apical united more than two-thirds their length, the basal for less than one-third; apical
-segments 4.5 cm. wide, deeply divided above, a long fiber terminating both the longer
-and the shorter ribs.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>As shown by the rimose bark this species affords a rather extreme instance of the
-gradual enlargement of the trunk at a distance from the growing point. Numerous leaf-bases
-remain attached to the trunk in the greenhouse as they would not do in nature,
-since they are torn loose except for a few fibers at the extreme sides.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
-<p class='c009'><a href='#r4'>4</a>. Dr. Rose also kindly permits the use of the following field notes and measurements
-showing that <i>Inodes Rosei</i> is also a taller and more slender tree than <i>I. Uresana</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c021'>“Trees 6–12 or sometimes even 18 meters high, the long slender naked trunk 15–20
-cm. in diameter, crowned with a large cluster of leaves; petioles 60 cm. or more long,
-flat on the face, pubescent, but becoming glabrate; blade pale green, 8 cm. or more in
-width, strongly keeled, more or less clothed beneath with brown scales on the large
-veins; segments cleft to below the middle, 25 mm. or less wide; inflorescence in large
-branching panicles 60 cm. or more long; fruit spherical, 18 mm. in diameter, blackish
-or dark blue when mature.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“A very common tree east of Rosario towards Mazatlan, also extending all the way
-from Rosario to Acaponeta; especially common on the low hills, and east of Rosario
-toward the mountains. This species is of considerable economic importance, the trunks
-being used in building fences, corrals and huts, while the leaves appear as thatch on a
-majority of the houses of this region.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
-<p class='c009'><a href='#r5'>5</a>. Hist. Nat. Palmarum 2: 29.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
-<p class='c009'><a href='#r6'>6</a>. Roemer and Schultes treated <i>Martinezia</i> as a synonym of <i>Oreodoxa</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
-<p class='c009'><a href='#r7'>7</a>. That the fruits are small and are ripened at one season, as stated in the key, was
-apparent from the size of the seedlings and from other circumstances which accorded
-with the testimony of the man whose house stood within a few rods of the largest tree.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c006'>
-</div>
-<div class='tnotes x-ebookmaker'>
-
-<div class='chapter ph2'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c026'>
- <div>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
- <ol class='ol_1 c003'>
- <li>Silently corrected obvious typographical errors and variations in spelling.
-
- </li>
- <li>Retained archaic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings as printed.
-
- </li>
- <li>Re-indexed footnotes using numbers and collected together at the end of the last
- chapter.
- </li>
- </ol>
-
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A SYNOPSIS OF THE PALMS OF PUERTO RICO ***</div>
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