Aiphanes eggersii explained

Aiphanes eggersii, known locally as corozo, is a species of spiney, pinnately leaved palm which is native to the coastal plain of Ecuador and adjacent dry forests of Peru.[1]

Description

Aiphanes eggersii is a small, multi-stemmed palm 1mto6mm (03feetto20feetm) tall with up to 10 stems. Stems are 7cmto8cmcm (03inchesto03inchescm) in diameter. Stems are covered with black or grey spines up to 10cm (00inches) long. Individuals have between 7 and 10 leaves which consists of a leaf sheath, a petiole and a rachis. Leaf sheaths, which wrap around the stem, are about 40cmto75cmcm (20inchesto30inchescm) long and are covered with black or grey spines up to 10cm (00inches) long. Petioles are 0cmto10cmcm (00inchesto00inchescm) long and spiny. Rachises are 115cmto205cmcm (45inchesto81inchescm) with 50 to 65 pairs of leaflets (or more rarely as few as 30 pairs).[2]

Inflorescences consist of a peduncle 42cmto137cmcm (17inchesto54inchescm) and a rachis 35cmto48cmcm (14inchesto19inchescm) long. The rachis bears 35 to 75 rachillae, which are the smaller branches which themselves bear the flowers. Flowers are borne in groups consisting of one female and two male flowers. The male flowers are yellow, while the female flowers are yellow with brown sepals. The ripe fruit is bright red, spherical, and 18to in diameter.[2]

Taxonomy

Aiphanes has been placed in the subfamily Arecoideae, the tribe Cocoseae and the subtribe Bactridinae, together with Desmoncus, Bactris, Acrocomia and Astrocaryum.[3] In his 1932 revision of the genus, German botanist Max Burret placed Aiphanes eggersii in the subgenus Macroanthera, one of the two subgenera into which he divided the Aiphanes. In their 1996 monograph, Finn Borchsenius and Rodrigo Bernal recognised that if Macroanthera was reduced to three species (A. horrida, A. minima, and this species) it could form a viable grouping, but that this would leave the other subgenus, Brachyanthera overly heterogeneous, and consequently the abandoned Burret's use of subgenera.[2]

Aiphanes eggersii was described by Burret in 1932 based on collections made by Danish botanist Henrik Franz Alexander von Eggers in February 1897. The generic epithet, Aiphanes, coined by German botanist Carl Ludwig Willdenow in 1801, derives from Greek ai, meaning "always" and phaneros, meaning "evident", "visible" or "conspicuous".[2] The specific epithet, eggersii, honours Eggers.[2]

Reproduction

The flowers of A. eggersii produce small quantities of nectar, but lack a scent. Male flowers open once the inflorescence is freed from the bract in which it develops. They last eight to ten days. Female flowers open about a week after the male flowers, and last for another week. The flowers are visited by bees and wasps and contained micromoth larvae; they are believed to be pollinated by bees, with a possible contribution from the wind.[2]

Distribution and habitat

Aiphanes eggersii is native to the dry forests of the coastal plain of Ecuador and northern Peru, in areas receiving as little as of precipitation annually. It is commonly found in the Ecuadorian province of Manabí.[2]

Uses

The fruit and seeds are edible, and trees are sometimes planted near houses.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tropicos Name - Aiphanes eggersii Burret. tropicos.org. 2017-04-14.
  2. Borchsenius. Finn. . December 1996 . Aiphanes (Palmae) . . 70 .
  3. Dransfield. John. Natalie W. Uhl. Conny B. Asmussen. William J. Baker. Madeline M. Harley. Carl E. Lewis. 2005. A New Phylogenetic Classification of the Palm Family, Arecaceae. Kew Bulletin. 60. 4. 559–69. 25070242.