''Astrocaryum alatum'' is a species of palm with edible nuts, a
flowering plant in the family
Arecaceae
The Arecaceae is a family of perennial flowering plants in the monocot order Arecales. Their growth form can be climbers, shrubs, tree-like and stemless plants, all commonly known as palms. Those having a tree-like form are called palm trees ...
. It is a common species found many types of rainforests and swamps in
Honduras
Honduras, officially the Republic of Honduras, is a country in Central America. The republic of Honduras is bordered to the west by Guatemala, to the southwest by El Salvador, to the southeast by Nicaragua, to the south by the Pacific Oce ...
,
Costa Rica
Costa Rica (, ; ; literally "Rich Coast"), officially the Republic of Costa Rica ( es, República de Costa Rica), is a country in the Central American region of North America, bordered by Nicaragua to the north, the Caribbean Sea to the no ...
,
Nicaragua and
Panama.
It is locally known as the ''coquillo'' or ''coquito'' in Costa Rica.
[
]
Description
''Astrocaryum alatum'' is the most common, least spiny and smallest of the three species of ''Astrocaryum
''Astrocaryum'' is a genus of about 36 to 40 species of palms native to Central and South America and Trinidad.
Description
''Astrocaryum'' is a genus of spiny palms with pinnately compound leaves–rows of leaflets emerge on either side of the ...
'' in Costa Rica.
It is a solitary palm, it does not form a cluster of trunks. The trunk grows up to six metres in height, often just two to four metres. It is fast-growing, faster than other ''Astrocaryum'' species.
The ripe fruit are some 3.8–5 cm long and 3.2-3.8 cm in width. Typically, this species has fruit which are densely spiny on the end half, but smooth in the basal half where it connects to the rachis. The fruit are more-or-less obovoid, greenish brown to yellow-brown and have a small beak at their end. They are borne in compact, spicate clusters. The rachillae develop entirely from staminate tissue, and break easily or naturally when the fruit are fully ripe.[ The flesh is white, firm, and a few millimetres thick.][
]
Similar species
In Costa Rica there are three species of ''Astrocaryum
''Astrocaryum'' is a genus of about 36 to 40 species of palms native to Central and South America and Trinidad.
Description
''Astrocaryum'' is a genus of spiny palms with pinnately compound leaves–rows of leaflets emerge on either side of the ...
'', and the other two species, ''A. confertum'' and ''A. standleyanum'', are uncommon and restricted in range, although both are sympatric
In biology, two related species or populations are considered sympatric when they exist in the same geographic area and thus frequently encounter one another. An initially interbreeding population that splits into two or more distinct species sh ...
with ''A. alatum''. This is the smallest, most common and least spiny species. It is the only species to have large fruit with spines on their distal ends, which are ''not'' a bright orange colour. It is also the only species to have leaves with unevenly divided leaflets which are arranged on a single plane, as opposed to multiple planes in the other two species, which gives their leaves a plumose appearance.[ The inflorescence of ''A. confertum'' is held erect, even when it is eventually covered in ripe fruit.][
''A. mexicanum'' is the most similar species, so similar that in 1995 some experts noted the two taxa might be conspecific.] Jean-Christophe Pintaud and colleagues provided a table of differences in anatomical leaf characteristics in 2008, which are rather subtle and require a microscope. The key
Key or The Key may refer to:
Common meanings
* Key (cryptography), a piece of information that controls the operation of a cryptography algorithm
* Key (lock), device used to control access to places or facilities restricted by a lock
* Key (map ...
provided notes the following differences: ''A. mexicanum'' has a thinner trunk without persistent leaf bases, but armed with rings or groups of flattened spines; smaller flowers with a proportionally smaller calyx
Calyx or calyce (plural "calyces"), from the Latin ''calix'' which itself comes from the Ancient Greek ''κάλυξ'' (''kálux'') meaning "husk" or "pod", may refer to:
Biology
* Calyx (anatomy), collective name for several cup-like structures ...
and distinct, tooth-like staminode
In botany, a staminode is an often rudimentary, sterile or abortive stamen, which means that it does not produce pollen.Jackson, Benjamin, Daydon; ''A Glossary of Botanic Terms with their Derivation and Accent''; Published by Gerald Duckworth & Co. ...
s (as opposed to staminodes merged into a ring); fruit with more but shorter spines; and the nut with the three pores positioned close to the apex (as opposed to up to a third of the distance from it).
'' Acrocomia'' species are other palms which are similar enough to be confused with this species, and the clustering '' Manicaria saccifera'' is superficially similar.[ '' Cryosophila'' species are also large palms and also have big trunk spines, but have fan-shaped leaves and forked spines. Several '' Bactris'' species have sharp trunk spines, but are often smaller trees.] ''Astrocaryum'' species in general can be told apart from these and other palm genera by the whitish or silvery undersides of the leaves.[
]
Common names
The Spanish name ''coyolillo'' is a diminutive of ''coyól''. The name is attested from Costa Rica in 1908, and said to also be used for different species of palm. The word ''coyól'' itself is derived from the Nahuatl language
Nahuatl (; ), Aztec, or Mexicano is a language or, by some definitions, a group of languages of the Uto-Aztecan languages, Uto-Aztecan language family. Varieties of Nahuatl are spoken by about Nahuas, Nahua peoples, most of whom live mainly in ...
word ''coyolli'', and originally means a type of round bell.
Taxonomy
''Astrocaryum alatum'' was first described in 1939 by Harold F. Loomis
Harold Frederick Loomis (December 23, 1896 – July 5, 1976) was an American botanist and myriapodologist known for his contributions to agronomy, plant pathology, and millipede taxonomy. He worked for the U.S. Department of Agriculture for o ...
, an agronomist working at the U.S. Plant Introduction Garden, Coconut Grove, Florida (and also an important millipede expert). The 1939 article itself remarks that it is strange such a large, common and obvious plant in a well-known region had only attracted the attention of a taxonomist so late in history.[ This is because it was, in fact, known before. The pioneer ]ethnobiologist ]
Ethnobiology is the scientific study of the way living things are treated or used by different human cultures. It studies the dynamic relationships between people, biota, and environments, from the distant past to the immediate present.culture ...
Henri François Pittier discussed the species using the name ''A. polystachyum''.[ This name had apparently first appeared in a 1885 publication by William Hemsley in the series ''Biologia Centrali-Americana'', but attributed to the German palm expert Hermann Wendland, and said to grow in Costa Rica, citing a ]type
Type may refer to:
Science and technology Computing
* Typing, producing text via a keyboard, typewriter, etc.
* Data type, collection of values used for computations.
* File type
* TYPE (DOS command), a command to display contents of a file.
* Ty ...
kept in Kew which was collected along the Sarapiquí River
The Sarapiquí River, or Rio Sarapiquí, in Costa Rica is a tributary of the San Juan River and forms the eastern border of Sarapiquí Canton. The area around the river is mostly lowlands tropical rainforest, having lush vegetation with a larg ...
. There appears to be some confusion here: Wendland had never described a ''A. polystachyum'',[ but instead had named a ''A. confertum'' from Costa Rica (absent in Hemsley's work).] ''A. polystachyum'' is now considered a synonym
A synonym is a word, morpheme, or phrase that means exactly or nearly the same as another word, morpheme, or phrase in a given language. For example, in the English language, the words ''begin'', ''start'', ''commence'', and ''initiate'' are all ...
of ''A. confertum'', but Pittier is clearly referring to ''A. alatum'' in his work, based on his description and the range he gives.[
As such an author of 1939 article had stayed at the town of ]El Cairo
El Cairo is a town and municipality located in the Department of Valle del Cauca, Colombia.
References
Municipalities of Valle del Cauca Department
{{ValledelCauca-geo-stub ...
, Costa Rica, in 1937 and 1938, collecting specimens and seeds of the palm and calling it ''A. polystachyum''. The seeds had been exported to the USDA in the US, and from there been distributed to interested plant growers in Florida with the Plant Introduction number 123380 under the name ''A. polystachyum''. It was noticed however, that neither Hemsley nor Wendland had properly described the species, thus Loomis decided to rename the taxon ''A. alatum''.[
]
Typification
Loomis did not designate a single holotype, it is difficult to fit all the representative organs of a large palm on a single herbarium sheet, but a type series of sheets of palm parts, stored at the United States National Herbarium, collected "along the Río Hondo near the fields of Santa Clara" by Orator F. Cook
Orator Fuller Cook Jr. (May 28, 1867 – April 23, 1949) was an American botanist, entomologist, and agronomist, known for his work on cotton and rubber cultivation and for coining the term "speciation" to describe the process by which new species ...
and C. B. Doyle in 1903.[ see als]
1
2
3
4
5
an
6
Classification
''A. mexicanum'' is very similar. Palm expert Andrew James Henderson and colleagues noted in their 1995 ''Field Guide to the Palms of the Americas'' that it was so similar, it might even be conspecific.[ Max Burret had classified ''A. mexicanum'' in a segregate genus ''Hexopetion'' in 1934, and when Loomis described ''A. alatum'' in 1939 he neglected comparing the two taxa, but none of the important publications on Neotropical palm taxonomy which were published in the rest of the 20th century followed Burret. Jean-Christophe Pintaud and colleagues placed ''A. alatum'' in ''Hexopetion'' in their 2008 paper, re-describing ''Hexopetion'' in the process to allow for the inclusion,][ although few seem to have followed their taxonomic interpretation.
In 2011 a group containing some of the previous authors published a study which looked at the differences between related palms in a number of ]plastid
The plastid (Greek: πλαστός; plastós: formed, molded – plural plastids) is a membrane-bound organelle found in the Cell (biology), cells of plants, algae, and some other eukaryotic organisms. They are considered to be intracellular endosy ...
DNA and nuclear
Nuclear may refer to:
Physics
Relating to the nucleus of the atom:
*Nuclear engineering
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Mathematics
*Nuclear space
* Nuclear ...
markers in order to elucidate their phylogeny. This study found strong evidence that ''A. alatum'' and ''A. mexicanum'' form a monophyletic
In cladistics for a group of organisms, monophyly is the condition of being a clade—that is, a group of taxa composed only of a common ancestor (or more precisely an ancestral population) and all of its lineal descendants. Monophyletic gro ...
group sister to the remaining ''Astrocaryum'' species.
Distribution
''Astrocaryum alatum'' is a widespread and common species found in eastern Honduras
Honduras, officially the Republic of Honduras, is a country in Central America. The republic of Honduras is bordered to the west by Guatemala, to the southwest by El Salvador, to the southeast by Nicaragua, to the south by the Pacific Oce ...
( Gracias a Dios Department), Costa Rica
Costa Rica (, ; ; literally "Rich Coast"), officially the Republic of Costa Rica ( es, República de Costa Rica), is a country in the Central American region of North America, bordered by Nicaragua to the north, the Caribbean Sea to the no ...
, eastern Nicaragua and western Panama.[ It occurs on both coasts of Costa Rica,][ although the ]IUCN
The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN; officially International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources) is an international organization working in the field of nature conservation and sustainable use of natu ...
claims it mostly occurs on the Caribbean side (although the distribution map as well as the list of national parks provided by the same website contradicts this).
In Panama it occurs in the provinces of Bocas del Toro
Bocas del Toro (; meaning "Mouth of the Bull") is a province of Panama. Its area is 4,643.9 square kilometers, comprising the mainland and nine main islands. The province consists of the Bocas del Toro Archipelago, Bahía Almirante (Almirante Bay ...
, Coclé, Colón, San Blas and Veraguas, as well as the formerly US controlled Panama Canal Zone
The Panama Canal Zone ( es, Zona del Canal de Panamá), also simply known as the Canal Zone, was an unincorporated territory of the United States, located in the Isthmus of Panama, that existed from 1903 to 1979. It was located within the terr ...
. Henderson ''et al''. state that the Panama Canal appears to mark its eastern limit, but San Blas lies to the east of the Canal.[ It is common near the Canal around the town of ]Santa Rita Santa Rita may refer to:
* Rita of Cascia (1381–1457), Catholic saint
*Associação Atlética Santa Rita, a Brazilian football (soccer) club
*Santa Rita de Cássia FC, an Angolan football (soccer) club
Places Belize
* Santa Rita, Corozal, a Ma ...
and in Bocas del Toro.[
In Nicaragua it occurs in the ]departments
Department may refer to:
* Departmentalization, division of a larger organization into parts with specific responsibility
Government and military
*Department (administrative division), a geographical and administrative division within a country, ...
of Río San Juan and Zelaya Zelaya may refer to:
*Celaya, a city in Mexico
*Zelaya Department, a former department of Nicaragua
*Zelaya, Buenos Aires
Zelaya is a small town of Pilar's Party of the Province of Buenos Aires Republic of Argentina.
It borders the parties Esco ...
.[
As of 2022 the '']Plants of the World Online
Plants of the World Online (POWO) is an online database published by the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. It was launched in March 2017 with the ultimate aim being "to enable users to access information on all the world's known seed-bearing plants by ...
'' website claims it occurs in Colombia
Colombia (, ; ), officially the Republic of Colombia, is a country in South America with insular regions in North America—near Nicaragua's Caribbean coast—as well as in the Pacific Ocean. The Colombian mainland is bordered by the Car ...
,[ but this is referenced to a source (''Catálogo de plantas y líquenes de Colombia'') which does not mention this species at all.] Other older sources also state it occurs in Colombia.
Ecology
Habitat
''Astrocaryum alatum'' occurs from sea level to an altitude of 1,000 metres,[ or 15 to 400 metres in Nicaragua,][ or 0 to at least 800 metres in Costa Rica.][ It is not a habitat specialist in general; Although it occurs in numerous habitats,] it is particularly abundant in swamp forests.[ It can germinate and survive in soft, watery mud, as well as firm soil, but avoids constantly submerged ground.][ It is also common in disturbed, cleared forest land, mature ]secondary woodland
A secondary forest (or second-growth forest) is a forest or woodland area which has re-grown after a timber harvest or clearing for agriculture, until a long enough period has passed so that the effects of the disturbance are no longer evident. ...
and deforested pastures.[ This species also occurs in higher altitude upland ]rainforest
Rainforests are characterized by a closed and continuous tree canopy, moisture-dependent vegetation, the presence of epiphytes and lianas and the absence of wildfire. Rainforest can be classified as tropical rainforest or temperate rainfores ...
, but in this habitat it occurs as an understory palm at relatively low densities, whereas it is often found in very high abundance in swamps.[ It does have some specific microclimate preferences in swamp forests, its distribution is primarily aggregated in two specific phytosociological associations, a specific type of inundated palm swamp and a mixed hardwood swamp dominated by '']Pterocarpus officinalis
''Pterocarpus officinalis'', the dragonsblood tree, is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae, native to southern Mexico, Central America, the Caribbean, and northern South America. It is typically found in coastal freshwater or slig ...
'' (this is locally called ''sangrillo''). The habitats often intergrade to some extent. Although it is a very common species in both habitats, it not a dominant species
Ecological dominance is the degree to which one or several species have a major influence controlling the other species in their ecological community (because of their large size, population, productivity, or related factors) or make up more of ...
in either.
There are a number of different types of palm swamp forests in Central America, ''A. alatum'' enjoys a particular low- biodiversity, high-density '' Manicaria saccifera''-dominated swamp which is inundated up to a meter deep at times, although the ground is drained a number of times a year -the ground is covered in water most of the year, but usually the water table is very close to soil level.[ ''M. saccifera'' is a superficially very similar palm.][ The water is often brackish.] This swamp-type is very densely planted with hundreds of trees a hectare, many of them hardwoods.[ Most of this habitat is found in the lowlands along the Caribbean coast, and it is very common within Barra del Colorado Wildlife Refuge][ and Tortuguero National Park in Costa Rica,][ extending deep into central eastern Nicaragua,][ but also is recorded to occur in Caño Negro Wildlife Refuge, and along the Pacific coast in the Osa Peninsula in the Sierpe region ( Térraba-Sierpe National Wetlands).][ ''M. saccifera'' shares this habitat with the palms ''A. alatum'' and ''Euterpe'' spp., with the most common broad-leaf trees being '']Calophyllum brasiliense
''Calophyllum brasiliense'' (guanandi) is a species of plant in the family ''Calophyllaceae''. It is native to subtropical and tropical regions of Mexico, Central America, South America and the Caribbean.
Description
It is an evergreen tree grow ...
'', '' Symphonia globulifera'', '' Carapa guianensis'' and ''Dialium guianense
''Dialium guianense'' is a species of tree in the flowering plant family Fabaceae. The species occurs through both Central America and South America, and was an important source of food and wood for the ancient Mayans.
Common names
In English ...
''.[ '']Astrocaryum mexicanum
''Astrocaryum mexicanum'', the chocho palm, cohune palm, or chapay, is a species of cocosoid palm in the family Arecaceae
The Arecaceae is a family of perennial flowering plants in the monocot order Arecales. Their growth form can be cli ...
'' takes the place of ''A. alatum'' in otherwise extremely similar ''Manicaria'' swamp in Belize to the north of the range of ''A. alatum''.[ Manatees often move into the deeper channels found in these swamps in order to feed on ]aquatic plant
Aquatic plants are plants that have adapted to living in aquatic environments (saltwater or freshwater). They are also referred to as hydrophytes or macrophytes to distinguish them from algae and other microphytes. A macrophyte is a plant that ...
s ('' Ludwigia'' and '' Hydrilla''). There are no species endemic to such habitats, overall herpetofauna biodiversity is low and similar to surrounding lands, but larger mammals may frequently briefly forage in these areas when the ground dries.[
''Sangrillo'' swamp forests are one of the most common habitats in Costa Rica.][ The land is flat, near sea level and often floods. Soils are alluvial, black in colour and rich in organic material. Fresh water covers the land for up to nine months a year, it drains continuously but the ground is always wet. Trees usually have buttress roots.][ In this forest type ''A. alatum'' is the third most common species by basal area, after ''Pterocarpus officinalis'' and then ''Carapa guianensis'', but these statistics are exactly opposite when one looks at mature individuals per hectare, with ''A. alatum'' being present at an average density of 143 stems/ha. Less commonly found trees here are '']Pentaclethra macroloba
''Pentaclethra macroloba'' is a large and common leguminous tree in the genus ''Pentaclethra'' native to the wet tropical areas of the northern Neotropics, which can form monoculture, monocultural stands in some seasonally flooded habitats. It ha ...
'' and ''Virola multiflora
''Virola'' is a genus of medium-sized trees native to the South American rainforest and closely related to other Myristicaceae, such as nutmeg. Species are known commonly as ''epená'', ''patricá'', or ''cumala''. They have glossy, dark green le ...
''. In these forests ''A. alatum'' is part of the canopy.[ The palms share the land with giant herbaceous plants such as '' Heliconia'' spp. and ''Maranta'' spp. There is ample ground-cover.][ It grows together with '']Virola sebifera
''Virola sebifera'' is a species of tree in the family Myristicaceae, from North and South America.Markus Wiesenauer, Suzann Kirschner-Brouns: Homöopathie - Das große Handbuch, Gräfe & Unzer Verlag, 2007,
Description
''V. sebifera'' is a t ...
'' in the lowland forest of Barbilla National Park
Barbilla National Park is a National Park in the Caribbean La Amistad Conservation Area of Costa Rica located on the eastern slopes of the Cordillera de Talamanca. It protects forests as well as Laguna Ayil and Cerro Tigre and the Dantas River wa ...
in Costa Rica.
A 2002 World Bank report classified and mapped Central America into some 90 ecosystems/ecoregions. In this system ''A. alatum'' is a frequent species, but never a dominant, in four main types of lowland forests, including the two ecosystems discussed above. The other mentioned ecosystems are well-drained, and moderately drained, tropical evergreen broad-leaved lowland rainforest.[
A well-drained, tall-growing, ground-cover-poor rainforest characterised along the Térraba River at 800m elevation near Pacific coast of Costa Rica, on a substrate of ]latosol Latosols, also known as tropical red earth, are soils found under tropical rainforests which have a relatively high content of iron and aluminium oxides. They are typically classified as oxisols (USDA soil taxonomy) or ferralsols (World Reference B ...
s, soil from marine sediments and some inceptisols, found ''A. alatum'' to be a frequently occurring species, along with '' Ardisia'' spp., '' Aspidosperma myristicifolia'', '' Caryocar costaricense'', ''Coccoloba padiformis
''Coccoloba padiformis'' is a plant species in the genus '' Coccoloba''. It is distributed in Mesoamerica and northern South America
South America is a continent entirely in the Western Hemisphere and mostly in the Southern Hemisphere, ...
'', ''C. standleyana'', ''C. tuerckheimii'', ''Cordia gerascanthus
''Cordia'' is a genus of flowering plants in the borage family, Boraginaceae. It contains about 300 species of shrubs and trees, that are found worldwide, mostly in warmer regions. Many of the species are commonly called manjack, while ''bocote ...
'', '' Cryosophila guarara'', '' Eleagia auriculata'', '' Genipa americana'', ''Gustavia angustifolia
''Gustavia angustifolia'' is a small tree, native to South America, with large white flowers. It is an endangered species.
Description
Leaves
Perhaps the most distinguishing feature of ''G. angustifolia'' is its leaves. ''G. angustifolia'' h ...
'', '' Jacaratia costaricensis'' and ''Socratea
''Socratea'' is a genus of five species of palms found in tropical Central America and South America.
It is commonly believed that ''Socratea'' can move away from where it germinated by growing roots on one side and abandoning them on the other ...
'' spp.. The submontane rainforest above 800m at this site had a similar composition.[
The palm is not especially common in most types of moderately drained rainforest on the Pacific side of Costa Rica, but it is a frequently seen species on the Atlantic side. In Nicaragua this type of rainforest commonly occurs in valleys and lower elevations in hilly terrain, and vegetation largely mixes with that of more well-drained soils on the hills. This type of woodland has a complex species composition, a few dozen tree species are recorded as frequent here and there are also many bushes and ]epiphyte
An epiphyte is an organism that grows on the surface of a plant and derives its moisture and nutrients from the air, rain, water (in marine environments) or from debris accumulating around it. The plants on which epiphytes grow are called phoroph ...
s. In Nicaragua it is one of the seven most common palms in this habitat.[
]
Animal associations
In Nicaragua it flowers throughout the year, but it fruits in October to May,[ although fruit and seeds appear to fall to ground and be available year-round in Costa Rica.] The scarab beetle ''Cyclocephala amazona
''Cyclocephala'' is a genus of scarab beetles from the subfamily Dynastinae (Coleoptera, Scarabaeidae). Beetles of this genus occur from southeastern Canada to Argentina and the West Indies.
Adults of this genus are nocturnal or crepuscula ...
'' was found to visit the flowers in Panama, among a number of other palms and other plants. In Costa Rica ''C. stictica'' and '' Mimeoma acuta'' visit the flower of this palm and certain other plants, in the case of ''M. acuta'' only other palms. The palm hosts two planthopper
A planthopper is any insect in the infraorder Fulgoromorpha, in the suborder Auchenorrhyncha, a group exceeding 12,500 described species worldwide. The name comes from their remarkable resemblance to leaves and other plants of their environment ...
species from the new genus ''Agoo'' in Costa Rica, ''A. dahliana'' and ''A. luzdenia''. As nymphs, these insects (probably) only feed on the fungi growing on the dead fronds which hang from the base of the crown of this palm. The caterpillars of the small cryptic moth ''Dunama jessiehillae
''Dunama jessiehillae'' is a moth in the family Notodontidae. It is found in Costa Rica, where it is only known from the east slope of the Cordillera Volcanica de Guanacaste and Tilaran, and in the Sarapiqui lowlands, at elevations ranging from ...
'' has been recorded feeding on the leaves of this palm. They feed exclusively on palms, but of 506 food plant records, only five are from ''A. alatum'' (almost two thirds are from ''Chamaedorea tepejilote
''Chamaedorea tepejilote'', also known as the pacaya palm, is a species of ''Chamaedorea'' palm tree found in the understory of the forests of southern Mexico, Central America, and northern Colombia.
Uses
The immature male inflorescences of ...
'', the rest from another twelve species). ''D. jessiehillae'' is restricted in distribution to mid-elevation rainforests on the Pacific coast of Costa Rica.
''A. alatum'' has very large seeds, and it may occur at higher elevations, so something large must be helping it get uphill. Like a number of other ''Astrocaryum'' investigated, it appears to be almost completely dependent on a single species, an agouti (''Dasyprocta punctata
The Central American agouti (''Dasyprocta punctata'') is a species of agouti from the family Dasyproctidae. The main portion of its range is from Chiapas and the Yucatan Peninsula (southern Mexico), through Central America, to northwestern Ecuad ...
''), for most of the seed dispersal. This is a large rodent weighing 2–4 kg.[ The agouti collects the fruits, cleans them of their pulp to stop that from attracting other animals, and caches the seeds, burying them in the soil usually near an object such as a rock, a fallen tree branch, or a buttress root. It is constantly interested in its caches and often digs up the seeds to rebury them elsewhere. One agouti will commonly rob the cache of another, transporting the seeds to new locations, and seeds can be transported sizeable distances in this manner. The behaviour is known as scatter-hoarding.][ ''Astrocaryum'' are advantageous to agoutis, because the seeds do not germinate quickly, allowing them to keep the seeds for lean times. They appear to preferentially store seeds with a long shelf-life, consuming those that germinate quickly first.][ The agoutis have other advantages for palms besides dispersal. Hiding the seeds in caches makes it harder for seed predators to find the seeds, both mammals and insects, and helps prevent the death of seeds and seedlings.][
Collared peccaries ('' Pecari tajacu'') are particularly destructive. These animals travel in large groups through the forest, trampling young plants, consuming fruit and seeds found on the ground, raiding agouti caches, and uprooting seedlings in order to feed on the attached seed. The seeds do not pass through the digestive systems of peccaries intact (agoutis also crush the seeds before ingesting them). Cached seeds are harder for the peccaries to find, and they may pass through an area a number of times without discovering a cache. Other animals which eat the seeds are squirrels and small rodents, specifically the spiny rat '']Proechimys semispinosus
Tome's spiny rat (''Proechimys semispinosus''), also known as Tomes' spiny rat or the Central American spiny rat, is a species of spiny rat distributed from Honduras to Ecuador. The IUCN has assessed its conservation status as being of "least ...
'' and the spiny pocket mouse '' Heteromys desmarestianus''.[ ''Proechimys semispinosus'' is known to scatter-hoard ''Astrocaryum'' as well, and are very common animals,] but field observations and camera traps found that the mammals interacting with the palm seeds on the forest floor were overwhelmingly peccaries and agoutis.[
Seeds may also suffer infestation from insects, primarily beetle species. Scolytine beetles bore small holes into the seed coat ( endocarp) to get inside, while ]bruchid beetle
The bean weevils or seed beetles are a subfamily (Bruchinae) of beetles, now placed in the family Chrysomelidae, though they have historically been treated as a separate family. They are granivores, and typically infest various kinds of seeds ...
s bore large holes. Seed-boring bark beetles ''Coccotrypes
''Coccotrypes'' is a genus of typical bark beetles in the family Curculionidae
The Curculionidae are a family of weevils, commonly called snout beetles or true weevils. They are one of the largest animal families, with 6,800 genera and 83,000 s ...
'' were found to infest a high percentage of the seeds in Costa Rica. These are small (approximately 1mm) beetles which bore holes through the endocarp, and into the endosperm
The endosperm is a tissue produced inside the seeds of most of the flowering plants following double fertilization. It is triploid (meaning three chromosome sets per nucleus) in most species, which may be auxin-driven. It surrounds the embryo and ...
of the palm seeds. Non-hoarded seeds suffer significantly higher levels of infestation by ''Coccotrypes''.[
]
Uses
The endosperm
The endosperm is a tissue produced inside the seeds of most of the flowering plants following double fertilization. It is triploid (meaning three chromosome sets per nucleus) in most species, which may be auxin-driven. It surrounds the embryo and ...
of the large seeds tastes pleasantly like coconut, and the fruits are sometimes harvested for this in Costa Rica.[ According to a Kew website it has local traditional medicinal uses in Colombia, but it does not occur in Colombia.][
]
Conservation
Although it is very common, for two decades the IUCN
The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN; officially International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources) is an international organization working in the field of nature conservation and sustainable use of natu ...
apparently mistakenly claimed it was rare.[Henderson, A. 1998]
''Astrocaryum alatum''
2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
Downloaded on 20 July 2007.[Henderson, A. 1998]
''Astrocaryum alatum''
2017 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Downloaded on 17 May 2021. The palm is actually very abundant and widespread,[ but another taxon, '']Astrocaryum confertum
''Astrocaryum'' is a genus of about 36 to 40 species of palms native to Central and South America and Trinidad.
Description
''Astrocaryum'' is a genus of spiny palms with pinnately compound leaves–rows of leaflets emerge on either side o ...
''-a very similar species to ''A. standleyanum'', was formerly only known from a single 19th century collection in Costa Rica, the holotype copy of which had been lost with the Allied fire bombing of the Berlin museum and botanical garden and the only surviving isotype housed at Kew. Although ''A. confertum'' had never actually been properly described until 1934,[ nonetheless it was the only species of '']Astrocaryum
''Astrocaryum'' is a genus of about 36 to 40 species of palms native to Central and South America and Trinidad.
Description
''Astrocaryum'' is a genus of spiny palms with pinnately compound leaves–rows of leaflets emerge on either side of the ...
'' said to occur in Costa Rica for much of the early 19th century, until it became apparent that the palms in the country described under that name were instead the species ''A. alatum'', and ''A. confertum'' became an enigmatic relic of history. After the name was encountered in the old literature by Grayum in 1988, and it was decided to see if the species was valid and might still be found growing in the area, ''A. confertum'' was quickly rediscovered. As at the time nothing was known about this taxon, it was thought to be a potentially rare endemic in the early 1990s, although it was soon also found to grow in Panama and Nicaragua.[
Andrew Henderson, who was compiling the palms for the IUCN for the first worldwide 1997 red list of threatened plants (eventually published in 1998),][ doubted the validity of the rediscovery of ''A. confertum'' at the time, stating "it is possibly conspecific with ''A. alatum''" in his submission about the taxon,][ as in his 1995 book about the palms of the region, which he used as the main reference.][ This 1995 book is known for tentatively ]lumping
Lumpers and splitters are opposing factions in any discipline that has to place individual examples into rigorously defined categories. The lumper–splitter problem occurs when there is the desire to create classifications and assign examples t ...
species, especially ''Astrocaryum''. The information appears to have gotten mixed up when entered into the first IUCN database built in the 1990s, with the entry in the 1998 ''Red List'' book being under the heading ''A. alatum'' instead of ''A. confertum''. The conservation status of ''A. confertum'' was stated to be "indeterminate" overall, and "rare" in Costa Rica and Panama.[ For more than two decades afterwards this mistake was repeated in the new online versions of the '' IUCN Red List'', only now the conservation status was furthermore mistakenly changed to "lower risk: near threatened".][
In the 2020 version of the ''Red List'', the species was deleted from the servers.
In the 2021 version of the ''Red List'', ''A. alatum'' has reappeared on the server again after a new assessment was uploaded, this time for the correct species, although now the old assessments for ''A. confertum'' have reappeared again, again under the wrong name. The species was now assessed as "near threatened". The author mostly only looked at Costa Rica, where the species is common, but he noted that it might be possible that the species could be said to maybe become rarer if in the future pineapples could be grown in the National Parks in the swamps along the Caribbean coast, and if the reader ignores the map provided by the webpage and pretends ''A. alatum'' only grows on a few square kilometres.][
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Protected areas
It is probably found in almost all national parks and protected area
Protected areas or conservation areas are locations which receive protection because of their recognized natural, ecological or cultural values. There are several kinds of protected areas, which vary by level of protection depending on the ena ...
s within its range.[ It is very abundant at Tortuguero National Park, where it forms vast palm brakes in the swamps.][ It is also among the most common trees in ]Barbilla National Park
Barbilla National Park is a National Park in the Caribbean La Amistad Conservation Area of Costa Rica located on the eastern slopes of the Cordillera de Talamanca. It protects forests as well as Laguna Ayil and Cerro Tigre and the Dantas River wa ...
.[ It is known to occur in Nicaragua in the ]Indio Maíz Biological Reserve Indio Maíz Biological Reserve is situated on the southeastern corner of Nicaragua bordering the San Juan River and Costa Rica. Measuring about 3,180 square kilometers, it is one of the largest protected lowland forest system in Central America, th ...
and Bosawás Biosphere Reserve The Bosawás Biosphere Reserve in the northern part of state Jinotega (border with Honduras), Nicaragua is a hilly tropical forest designated in 1997 as a UNESCO biosphere reserve. At approximately 20,000 km² (2 million hectares) in size, the ...
; in Costa Rica in the Área de Conservación Guanacaste, Caño Negro Wildlife Refuge, Barra del Colorado Wildlife Refuge, La Selva Biological Station, Braulio Carrillo National Park
Braulio Carrillo National Park is a national park in Heredia Province and San José Province, in central Costa Rica. It is part of the Central Conservation Area.
Geography
The park is located on the volcanic Cordillera Central (Central mountain ...
, Jairo Mora Sandoval Gandoca-Manzanillo Mixed Wildlife Refuge
Jairo Mora Sandoval Gandoca-Manzanillo Mixed Wildlife Refuge ( es, Refugio Nacional de Vida Silvestre Mixto Jairo Mora Sandoval Gandoca-Manzanillo), is a protected area in Costa Rica, managed under the Caribbean La Amistad Conservation Area, i ...
, Carara National Park,[ ]La Tirimbina Wildlife Refuge
La Tirimbina Wildlife Refuge ( es, Refugio de Vida Silvestre La Tirimbina), is a protected area in Costa Rica, managed under the Central Conservation Area
Central Conservation Area ( es, Área de Conservación Central (ACC)), is an administrativ ...
, Golfo Dulce Forest Reserve and Corcovado National Park
Corcovado National Park ( es, Parque Nacional Corcovado) is a National Park on the Osa Peninsula, in Osa Canton, southwestern Costa Rica (9° North, 83° West), which is part of the Osa Conservation Area. It was established on 24 October 1975 ...
; and in Panama in the Soberanía National Park
Soberanía National Park (''Parque Nacional Soberanía'') is a national park in Panama near the banks of the Panama Canal in the provinces of Panamá and Colón, some from Panama City. The Chagres River runs through the park. Established as a ...
, Río Chagres National Park, as well as many more.[ In Costa Rica, the majority of the most important habitat (wetlands) is protected in the Nation Park system. Outside of this system different types of wetlands are being impacted by agriculture, primarily clearance and drainage for rice and sugarcane cultivation along the Tempisque River near the Pacific coast, although it is not entirely clear the brackish flooded areas which this palm preferentially inhabits are the types of swamps which are being drained.][
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Footnotes
References
{{Taxonbar, from=Q4811546
alatum
Flora of Costa Rica
Flora of Honduras
Flora of Nicaragua
Flora of Panama
Near threatened plants
Taxonomy articles created by Polbot