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  2. Chamaerops - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chamaerops

    The leaves of the adult plants have been used to make brooms and for weaving mats, carrier baskets, and similar articles. For finer work the young, unopened leaves are treated with sulphur to soften them and provide supple fibre. The husk, known in southern Spain as "higa", is edible before it becomes too tough to eat as it matures.

  3. Oncosperma tigillarium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oncosperma_tigillarium

    Oncosperma tigillarium grows to 12m (possibly up to 30m) in height in dense thickets of up to 50 palm trees. The trunks of the palms are covered with long black spines. Oncosperma tigilarium has finely pinnate leaves, with drooping leaflets. [4] [5] [6] [7]

  4. Astrocaryum standleyanum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astrocaryum_standleyanum

    The pinnate frond is up to 4 meters long [4] and typically palm-like in appearance. It has many leaflets arranged irregularly, clustered and angled. [6] The underside is glaucous. [4] A mature, expanded leaf lasts for about 4.5 years, and the plant grows 3 to 5 new leaves per year. The trunk is patterned with the marks of leaves that have ...

  5. Washingtonia robusta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washingtonia_robusta

    Washingtonia robusta, known by common name as the Mexican fan palm, Mexican washingtonia, or skyduster is a palm tree native to the Baja California peninsula and a small part of Sonora in northwestern Mexico. Despite its limited native distribution, W. robusta one of the most widely cultivated subtropical palms in the world. [3]

  6. Borassus aethiopum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borassus_aethiopum

    The typical form of Borassus aethiopum is a solitary palm to 25 metres (82 feet) in height and 1 m (3.3 ft) in diameter at the base. In the river bottoms (floodplains) of many East African rivers (the Rufiji in Tanzania and the Tana in Kenya among others) a closely related form can be up to 7 ft (2.1 m) thick at breast height (4 ft or 1.2 m above ground) and having the same thickness in its ...

  7. Socratea exorrhiza - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socratea_exorrhiza

    A close up view of the stilt roots How the stilt roots were proposed to allow it to right itself after other plants collapse on it. 1 - the palm is growing normally. 2 - a tree collapses onto the palm and flattens the stem. 3 - new stilt roots form along the old stem and the original roots (dashed lines) start to die. 4 - the palm continues to grow normally but has now moved away from where it ...

  8. Phoenix reclinata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phoenix_reclinata

    Phoenix reclinata is a dioecious clumping palm, producing multiple stems from 7.5 to 15 m in height and 30 cm in width. Foliage is pinnate and recurved, growing 2.5 to 4.5 m in length and 0.75 m in width. Leaf color is bright to deep green on 30 cm petioles with long, sharp spines at the base, with 20 to 40 leaves per crown.

  9. Beaucarnea recurvata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beaucarnea_recurvata

    Elephant's foot palm tree trunk in Artemisa Province, Cuba It is an evergreen perennial growing to 15 feet 6 inches (4.72 m) with a noticeable expanded caudex , for storing water. The single palm-like stem produces terminal tufts of strap-shaped, recurved leathery leaves, sometimes hair lock-shaped in the ends, and with occasional panicles of ...