Product Description
Habitat and Distribution
Vietnam. Lowland rain forests on steep mountain slopes of granite or quartzite rocks; alt. 100-1000 m. Guangxi, Yunnan province.
Description
Stems solitary or clustered, to 1.5 m tall, to 6 cm in diam., sometimes short and subterranean. Leaf sheaths 12-20 cm, extended above petioles into 6-15 cm ocreas; petioles 15-100 cm, unarmed or proximal about half with widely spaced, recurved, brown spines to 0.5 cm; blades 30-107 cm wide, split into 5-8(-13) segments, mottled light and dark green, with straight sides; middle segment wider than others, deeply split into 2 lobes, these 16-58 cm, 13-30 cm wide at apices, costa terminating in a glandlike structure abaxially at base of split. Plants dioecious. Inflorescences 40-70 cm, erect at first, later pendulous below crown; rachis 0-12 cm, with 1 (rarely 2) partial inflorescences, these branched to 1 order; male rachillae 2-7, 9-14 cm; female rachillae 1-4, 8-24 cm; male flowers borne in clusters, female flowers solitary. Fruits ovoid-globose, slightly 3-sided, 0.9-1.5 × 0.7-1.1 cm, red at maturity, with reflexed perianth. (efloras.org)
Culture
Licuala dasyantha (Now Lanonia dasyantha), incorrectly known as Licuala radula before, is a vulverable species now listed on the endangered and protected list. It was first found in a limestone mountain as a small, clumping palmate palm up to 2m tall, with attractive mottled leaves,though not as highly developed as Mapu. It is monoecious (having separate male and female reproductive units on the same plant) whose seeds are mature in November. Different from other tropical Licuala, Licuala dasyantha is probably the most cold hardy in its genus and more interesting is that it has striking yellow dots and rings on the leaves making them quite cute and beautiful.. Say in 2002, the 1 year old seedling and adult palms did get notice any damage after 2 continuous raining days as low as -2C(28.4F) in Guilin City, Guangxi Province where the lowest temerpature goes down to -5C. (coldplant.com)
Comments and Curiosities
Previous name Licuala dasyantha.
This little known small palm is native to rainforests in northern Vietnam between 100 and 1000 m and reaches just over the border into southern China (Guangxi). It forms an underground or briefly erect trunk to 1.5 m tall that holds a dense crown of fairly large, beautifully mottled, light and dark green leaves to 1 m in diameter with a few wide segments, similar to the magnificent L. mattanensis Mapu. While not as spectacular as the ultra-tropical Mapu, it has the advantage of being much more tolerant of cool conditions and will actually grow successfully not only in tropical but also in warm temperate climates, where it appreciates a protected spot in filtered light. (RPS.com)