
Aphandra - Wikipedia
Aphandra is a monotypic genus of flowering plants in the palm family native to the Amazon rainforest vegetation in South America (Ecuador, Brazil, and Peru). Its only species is …
Aphandra natalia - Palmpedia - Palm Grower's Guide
2019年7月27日 · Stand of Aphandra natalia, an ivory palm growing in lowland and premontane rain forests of Ecuador, Peru and northern Brazil (photo credit: Mikkel B. Sørensen).
Aphandra natalia - iNaturalist
Aphandra is a monotypic genus of flowering plant in the palm family native to the Amazon rainforest vegetation in South America (Ecuador, Brazil, and Peru). Its only species is …
Aphandra natalia - LLIFLE
Origin and Habitat: South America ( Amazon rainforest stretching to the foothills of the Andes lowlands, from south of Río Napo in eastern Ecuador, through the northern parts of …
Aphandra natalia - Useful Tropical Plants - The Ferns
Aphandra natalia is a single-stemmed, evergreen palm growing 5 - 15 metres tall. The unbranched stem can be 20 - 22cm in diameter [ it is topped by a crown of 10 - 20 leaves that …
Aphandra natalia - SpringerLink
2014年1月1日 · The only representative of its genus, Aphandra natalia is an understory palm of montane forests on the eastern slopes of the Andes from Ecuador south to Peru and into the …
Edible Fruits from the Ecuadorian Amazon: Ethnobotany ... - MDPI
2023年10月21日 · Aphandra natalia (Balslev and Henderson) Barfod is a species of palm native to the Ecuadorian Amazon; it is characterized by having a hard, scaly rind, slightly sweet, …
Aphandra natalia are described and compared with those of the other two genera in the Phytelephantoideae (Arecaceae). In Aphandra, staminate flowers are borne in monopodial …
Aphandra natalia (Balslev & A.J.Hend.) Barfod | Plants of the …
First published in Opera Bot. 105: 46 (1991) The native range of this species is E. Ecuador to N. Peru and N. Brazil. It is a tree and grows primarily in the wet tropical biome. Discover the …
Aphandra - Wikispecies
Aphandra in the Germplasm Resources Information Network (GRIN), U.S. Department of Agriculture Agricultural Research Service. Accessed: 08-Apr-12.