enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Metroxylon vitiense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metroxylon_vitiense

    The fruit has scales, similar to a pineapple, but whose color varies from green to golden yellow to dark brown to grey. [7] Like other species of Metroxylon, M. vitiense propagates by seed, which germinates from its fruit. The palm is monocarpic and dies after it flowers and sets seeds, similar to the century plant and the Hawaiian silversword ...

  3. Metroxylon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metroxylon

    Metroxylon is a genus of monoecious flowering plants in the Arecaceae (palm) family, and commonly called the sago palms consisting of seven species.They are native to Western Samoa, New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, the Moluccas, the Carolines and Fiji in a variety of habitats, and cultivated westward to Thailand and Malaya.

  4. Cycas revoluta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cycas_revoluta

    Cycas revoluta (Sotetsu [Japanese ソテツ], sago palm, king sago, sago cycad, Japanese sago palm) is a species of gymnosperm in the family Cycadaceae, native to southern Japan including the Ryukyu Islands. It is one of several species used for the production of sago, as well as an ornamental plant. The sago cycad can be distinguished by a ...

  5. Pestalotiopsis palmarum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pestalotiopsis_palmarum

    It has been shown that the fungus usually requires wounds to infect the plant and necessary for the fungus to develop. The first symptoms of Pestalotiopsis palmarum begin as very small yellow, brown or black discoloration of the leaves. The disease can be restricted to the leaf blade or may only appear on the petiole and rachis right away.

  6. Metroxylon sagu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metroxylon_sagu

    True sago palm is a suckering (multiple-stemmed) palm, each stem only flowering once (hapaxanthic) with a large upright terminal inflorescence. A stem grows 7–25 metres (23–82 feet) tall before it ends in an inflorescence. [3] Before flowering, a stem bears about 20 pinnate leaves up to 10 m (33 ft) long.

  7. Cycas rumphii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cycas_rumphii

    'Queen sago' alludes to the name 'king sago' given to the related Cycas revoluta, as well as to its use as a source of edible starch.The specific epithet rumphii honours the German-born Dutch naturalist Georg Eberhard Rumphius (1628–1702), who served first as a military officer with the Dutch East India Company in Ambon, then with the civil merchant service of the same company.

  8. Zamia furfuracea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zamia_furfuracea

    The leaves radiate from the center of the trunk; each leaf is 50–150 cm long with a petiole 15–30 cm long, and 6-12 pairs of extremely stiff, pubescent (fuzzy) green leaflets. These leaflets grow 8–20 cm long and 3–5 cm wide. Occasionally, the leaflets are toothed toward the tips. The circular crowns of leaves resemble fern or palm ...

  9. Cycas circinalis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cycas_circinalis

    Cycas circinalis, also known as the queen sago, is a species of cycad known in the wild only from southern India. Cycas circinalis is the only gymnosperm species found among native Sri Lankan flora. Taxonomy