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Adonidia merrillii, the Manila palm, is a palm tree species native to the Philippines (Palawan and Danjugan Island). [1] This palm was cultivated for centuries in East Asia before becoming a staple in the West. It is reportedly naturalized in the West Indies and Florida. [3]
The first, and better known, is the Manila palm (Adonidia merrillii), which is native to the Philippines (Palawan and Danjugan Island) and is reportedly naturalized in the West Indies. [6] The second is Adonidia dransfieldii, native to Sabah in Borneo and first described in 2015. [3]
A. Adelmeria; Adonidia merrillii; Aglaia costata; Aglaia pyriformis; Alocasia atropurpurea; Alocasia clypeolata; Alocasia heterophylla; Alocasia micholitziana
Adonidia - Balaka - Brassiophoenix - Carpentaria - Drymophloeus - Manjekia - Normanbya - Ponapea - Ptychococcus - Ptychosperma - Veitchia - Wodyetia Ptychospermatinae is a palm tree subtribe in the tribe Areceae .
From 1957 to 2008, the Adonidia genus had been merged into Veitchia until being returned to its original status as a separate genus. This is the origin of the Veitchia merrillii name. [ 4 ]
Adonidia dransfieldii is a species of Adonidia palm native to Sabah, Borneo, Malaysia.It grows up to 7 metres (23 ft) in height. [1]It is very similar in appearance to the much more common Adonidia merrillii with the chief visual differences being a slightly more golden coloration, more slender trunk, more upright inflorescence, thinner leaves, and less clefted trunks.
Cadang-cadang is a disease caused by Coconut cadang-cadang viroid (CCCVd, Cocadviroid cadangi), a lethal viroid of several palms including coconut (Cocos nucifera), African oil palm (Elaeis guineensis), anahaw (Saribus rotundifolius), and buri (Corypha utan). The name cadang-cadang comes from the word gadang-gadang that means dying in Bicol. [1]
Chamaedorea is a genus of 107 species of palms, native to subtropical and tropical regions of the Americas. [2] [3] They are small palms, growing to 0.3–6 m (1 ft 0 in – 19 ft 8 in) tall with slender, cane-like stems, growing in the understory in rainforests, and often spreading by means of underground runners, forming clonal colonies.