Palms in Central Florida

 


by Sharon LaPlante

Rhapidophyllum hystrix, Needle palm

An evergreen palm that has a stem that is below ground. The stem may eventually, with maturity, reach above the ground as much as 3 feet.

The petioles are smooth, but the leaf sheath does have a long needlelike spine.  Leaf blades are fanlike without a midrib.  The leaf surface is dark green above with lower surfaces and petioles having scaly pubescence.                             

The flowers are small & in clusters that appear in the spring & summer.

The fruit is fleshy, oval, or squarish to pear-shaped if crowded during growth.  Reddish to purple-brown in color with a loose mat of tawny hairs that are easily rubbed off.

It occurs naturally in wet to mesic woods, ravine slopes, and hammocks.

Bees, flies & wasps use the flowers for nectar, and the berries are an important wildlife food.

In the home landscape it grows in part-shade, with average to moist, well drained, organic soils. 

Scrub palmetto (Sabal etonia)

An evergreen shrub with a subterranean trunk that may eventually, with maturity, reach above the ground as much as 3 feet.

The petioles of the leaves are smooth. The leaves are palmately lobed, with long filaments.

The flowers are small, & in clusters born on stalks that appear in the spring & summer.

The fruit is fleshy and round and bluish-black when ripe.

It occurs naturally in dry pinelands, oak scrub, and sand pine scrub.

Bees, flies & wasps use the flowers for nectar, and the berries are an important wildlife food.

In the landscape it grows in part-shade to full sun with dry to average soils.

Blue-stem palmetto (Sabal minor)

An evergreen shrub with a subterranean trunk, rarely emerging to 5 feet.

The petioles of the leaves are smooth, the leaves are bluish, & palmately divided into segments with a conspicuous V-shape, without filaments, without a midrib, & about 3 feet across.

The flowers are small, borne in clusters near the end of the stalk, and blooming in the spring, summer & fall.

The fruit is a shiny, black, berry.

It is found in moist to wet woods.

Bees, flies & wasps use the flowers for nectar, and the berries are an important wildlife food.

In the home landscape it can be grown in shade with moist organic soils.

Cabbage palm (Sabal palmetto)

An evergreen tree with a single stem that may reach 75 feet in height.

The petioles of the leaves are smooth. The leaf blades are fanlike with a midrib that curves downward, 3 feet across, divided into segments with a conspicuous V-shape, and having filaments.

The flowers are born in long-stalked, drooping, clusters that bloom in the spring & summer.

The fruit is a dark fleshy, small, round berry.

It is found in pinelands, prairies, hammocks, shell middens, & swamps.

Bees, flies & wasps use the flowers for nectar, and the berries are an important wildlife food.

In the home landscape it can be grown in shade to full sun with moist or dry, sandy or organic soils.

Saw palmetto (Serenoa repens)

An evergreen shrub with above ground, horizontal stems that can reach 20 feet in height, but the average is 6 feet.

The petioles of the leaves have sharp teeth. The leaves are palmately divided into segments without filaments, they have no midrib, and can reach up to 3 feet across.

The flowers are born in spike-like clusters that bloom in the spring & summer.

The fruit is a black, fleshy, round berry.

It is can be found growing naturally in wet to dry pinelands, flatwoods, and hammocks.

Bees, flies & wasps use the flowers for nectar, and the berries are an important wildlife food.

In the home landscape it can be grown in shade to full sun with moist or dry, sandy or organic soils.

 

Austin, Dan. Scrub Plant Guide. Gumbo Limbo Nature Center of South Palm Beach County, Inc. 1993

Bell C. Ritchie and B. J. Taylor. Florida Wildflowers and Roadside Plants. Laurel HiII Press: Chapel Hill, NC. 1982

Godfrey, R.K., and J.W. Wooten. Trees, Shrubs, and Woody Vines of Northern Florida and Adjacent Georgia and Alabama. University of Georgia Press: Athens, GA 1988

Nelson, Gil. The Shrubs & Woody Vines of Florida. Pineapple Press: Sarasota, FL 1996

Radford, Albert E., H. E. Ahles and C. R. Bell. Manual of Vascular Flora of the Carolinas. University of North Carolina: Chapel Hill, NC. 1964

Wunderlin, Richard P. Guide to the Vascular Plants of Central Florida. University Press of Florida: Gainesville, FL. 1982

Wunderlin, Richard P. Guide to the Vascular Plants of Florida. University Press of Florida: Gainesville, FL. 1998

Wunderlin, Richard P. Checklist of the Vascular Plants of the Florida Suncoast. USF Institute for Systemic Botany: Tampa, Fl. 1995

 

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