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Palm trees of the Amazon and their uses

Chapter 67: PLATE XLVIII. Cocos nucifera, Linnæus.
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The work surveys numerous Amazonian palm species through detailed descriptions and forty-eight plates, focusing on morphological characters—stems, roots, leaves, inflorescences, and fruit—to aid identification. The author records native names and documents how local peoples employ palms for food, fibers, brooms, oils, and building materials, while noting variation in form and habitat distribution. Botanical remarks on genera, species distinctions, and geographic range accompany personal field observations and practical uses. Several taxa are illustrated from original drawings and compared with specimens in botanical collections to support accurate identification and application.

PLATE XLVIII.
Cocos nucifera, Linnæus.

Coqueiro, Portuguese.
The Cocoa-nut.

The stem of this well-known palm is very smooth, seldom quite erect, and often much thicker at the bottom. The leaves are large, terminal and regularly pinnate. The leaflets are rigid, and spread out very flat on each side of the midrib. From the sheathing bases of the petioles grows a compact fibrous material resembling in texture the spathe of the Bussú.

The spadices are produced from among the leaves, and are large and simply branched. The fruits are very large, and have a dense fibrous external covering over the well-known cocoa-nut.

This tree is not a native of South America, but as it is generally cultivated in every part of the tropics, I have given a figure of it. Its peculiar characteristic is the rigidity of its leaves, which curve or droop very slightly, and the leaflets spread out with remarkable flatness and regularity. The stem also is rather massive in accordance with the immense weight of fruit which it produces, and the whole tree, though exceedingly handsome, has not that light and feathery appearance which it is often represented as possessing. It is not impossible, however, that it may have acquired by its naturalization in America an aspect differing somewhat from its characteristic features when growing on the sea-shore, on the coral islands of India and the Pacific.

There it is of the greatest utility to man. It supplies food and drink and oil. Its fibres are woven into cordage and matting, and it even furnishes animal as well as vegetable food, herds of swine being fed and fattened entirely on its fruit.

On the banks of the Amazon, on the contrary, we see at once that it is in a foreign land. It flourishes indeed with great luxuriance, but no part of it is applied to any useful purpose, the fruit only being consumed as an occasional luxury. In the towns and larger villages where the Portuguese have settled it has been planted, but among the Indians of the interior it is still quite unknown.

List of the Palms described in this Work, with their Native Names and Uses.

Botanical Name. Native Name. Uses.
Leopoldinia    
  pulchra Jará Stem used for fencing, rafters, &c.
  major Jará assú Fruit for making salt.
  piassaba Piassába Fibre for cordage, brooms, &c.; leaves for thatching; fruit eatable.
       
Euterpe    
  oleracea Assaí Fruit for making a drink; stem for rafters, &c.
  catinga Assaí de Catinga Fruit for making a drink.
       
Œnocarpus    
  baccaba Baccába Fruit makes a drink and oil; leaves for thatching.
  batawá Patawá Fruit makes a drink; spinous processes used for making arrows.
  disticha Baccába Leaves for thatching.
  minor Baccába miri Fruit makes a drink.
       
Iriartea    
  exorhiza Pashiúba Stem split for floors and ceilings, &c.; air-roots for graters.
  ventricosa Pashiúba barriguda Stem split for lances, harpoons, floors, &c.; swollen part of stem for canoes.
  setigera Pashiúba miri Stem hollowed for making blowtubes or Gravatánas.
       
Raphia    
  tædigera Jupatí Leaf-stalks split for making boxes, partitioning houses, doors, &c.
       
Mauritia    
  flexuosa Mirití Fruit makes a drink; fibres of twisted into string for hammocks, &c.; leaf-stalks as the last.
  aculeata Caranaí Fruit makes a drink.
  gracilis Caranaí Fruit makes a drink.
  pumila Caranaí Not known.
  caraná Caraná Leaves good for thatch; leaf-stalks used as those of Raphia tædigera.
       
Lepidocaryum    
  tenue Caranaí do Mato None.
       
Geonoma    
  multiflora Ubimrána These species and others allied all have the leaves more or less used for thatching.
  paniculigera Ubim de Cotiwiya
  rectifolia Ubimrána
       
Manicaria    
  saccifera Bussú Leaves the best for thatching;
      spathe for caps, wrappers &c.
       
Desmoncus    
  macroacanthus Jacitára Bark makes “tipitis” or elastic
      cylinders for squeezing the
      grated mandiocca.
       
Bactris    
  pectinata These little prickly palms seem not to be applied to any particular uses.
  n.s. Marayarána
  elatior Marayarána
  n.s. Unknown
  macrocarpa
  tenuis
  simplicifrons
  maraja Marajá Fruit eatable.
  integrifolia None.
       
Guilielma    
  speciosa Pupúnha Fruit very good and nutritious; wood very hard, black and durable.
       
Acrocomia    
  lasiospatha Mucujá Fruit eatable.
       
Astrocaryum    
  murumurú Murumurú Cattle eat fruit.
  gynacanthum Mumbáca None.
  vulgare Tucúm Leaf-fibres for cordage.
  tucumá Tucumá Fruit eatable.
  jauarí Jauarí Nuts for lace-bobbin heads.
  aculeatum Marayá None. Others with the same name have eatable fruit.
  acaule Bark of leaf-stalks for baskets.
  humile Fruit eatable.
       
Attalea    
  speciosa Uauassú Leaves for thatch.
  excelsa Urucurí Fruit burnt for smoking rubber.
  spectabilis Curúa Leaves for thatch.
       
Maximiliana    
  regia Inajá Fruit eatable.
       
Cocos    
  nucifera Coqueiro The Cocoa-nut; fruit eatable.

The genera of Palms found in America are thirty-six in number. Thirty-two of these are entirely confined to it, while only four are common to the Old and New Worlds, as shown in the following list:—

List of the American Genera of Palms.
Name of Genus. No. of species mentioned in this Work. Species found in America. Species of American Genera in the Old World.
Chamedorea 0 23 0
Hyospathe 0 1 0
Morenia 0 2 0
Kunthia 0 1 0
Leopoldinia 3 4 0
Euterpe 3 12 0
Œnocarpus 4 6 0
Oreodoxia 0 6 0
Reinhardtia 0 1 0
Iriartea 4 9 0
Ceroxylon 0 3 0
Raphia 1 1 2
Mauritia 7 8 0
Lepidocaryum 1 2 0
Geonoma 3 33 0
Manicaria 1 1 0
Copernicia 0 6 0
Brahea 0 2 0
Sabal 0 9 0
Trithrinax 0 2 0
Chamærops 0 2 6
Thrinax 0 8 0
Desmoncus 1 14 0
Bactris 9 46 0
Guilielma 1 3 0
Martinezia 0 4 0
Acrocomia 1 8 0
Astrocaryum 8 17 0
Elœis 0 1 1
Attalea 3 16 0
Maximiliana 1 3 0
Orbignia 0 3 0
Syagrus 0 5 0
Diplothemium 0 5 0
Jubæa 0 1 0
Cocos 1 17 1
Totals 52 285 10
PRINTED BY TAYLOR AND FRANCIS,
RED LION COURT, FLEET STREET.

TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
  1. Silently corrected obvious typographical errors and variations in spelling.
  2. Retained archaic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings as printed.