Normanbya
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Normanbya is a monotypic genus of palms containing the single species Normanbya normanbyi, which is known by the common name black palm[1][2][3] It is endemic to Queensland, Australia and is threatened by habitat destruction.[4]
Description
Normanbya normanbyi is visually very similar to the more well-known Foxtail palm but is slightly smaller in all respects.[3] It is a single-stemmed palm with attractive "bushy" fronds, similar to a bottlebrush. It grows to a height of Template:Cvt with a small crown of fronds each measuring around Template:Cvt long with a petiole about Template:Cvt long.[1][5] The fronds have 75-95 whorled pinnae (leaflets) up to Template:Cvt in length, each of which are divided longitudinally into 7-11 radiating segments, giving the fronds the bushy appearance. The pinnae are dark green on the upper surface and silvery underneath and the tips are abruptly truncated (like a fishtail).[1][5]
The inflorescence (grouping of flowers) is a panicle and is borne on the trunk just below the crownshaft. They are around Template:Cvt long and the sessile (stemless) green flowers are grouped in threes, each with one pistillate (functionally female) and two staminate (functionally male) flowers. The staminate flowers have 24 to 40 stamens, the pistillate flowers have three strongly recurved stigmas.[1][6]
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Taxonomy
The basionym of this species is Cocos normanby, described in 1874 by Walter Hill from a specimen he found on the banks of the Daintree River, and named by him in honour of the then Governor of Queensland George Phipps, 2nd Marquess of Normanby.[7] In 1930 the American botanist Liberty Hyde Bailey reclassified it under its current name.[8]
Distribution and habitat
This species is restricted to a small part of the Wet Tropics of Queensland World Heritage Site, specifically the area from just south of Rossville to just south of the Daintree River near Mossman. It grows in tropical rainforest in altitudes from sea level up to Template:Cvt.[1] There is also a single confirmed sighting of the black palm from Moa Island in the Torres Strait, which is roughly Template:Cvt north of Rossville.[9]
Ecology and uses
Fruits of the Black palm are eaten by cassowaries and sulphur-crested cockatoos.[6] Whilst the cassowary swallows the fruit whole and passes the seed out in its droppings, thereby assisting in spreading the seeds throughout the forest, the cockatoos will remove the fruit's flesh and chew into the seeds themselves, destroying their ability to germinate.
The Kuku Yalanji people, who are the original inhabitants of the area where this palm is found, had many uses for the plant. The very hard timber was split along the length of the trunk to make spears, clapsticks, nulla nullas and digging sticks.[10][11] The buds and new shoots can be eaten and a fibre made from the crownshafts was used as a string to tie spear heads to the shafts, fish traps and cradles.[11]
Conservation status
In the IUCN's Red List, this species is assessed as vulnerable,[4] but in the Australian state of Queensland (where the plant is endemic) it is considered to be of least concern.[12]
The IUCN cites "land clearance" as the justification for the vulnerable status of Normanbya normanbyi.[4] While much of the area where it grows is protected under both Queensland's National Park system and the World Heritage listing, there is also a significant portion of lowland rainforest that is privately owned, uncleared land, and which has an uncertain future in regard to the preservation of the natural habitat.[13]
Cultivation
Normanbya normanbyi is visually very similar to the very popular Foxtail palm (Wodyetia bifurcata) but is not as widely planted as the latter. It may be grown from fresh seed[14] and is also available at many plant nurseries. It requires a shady position when young, well-drained soil and plentiful water.[2][15]
Gallery
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Trunk, growing amongst lush tropical foliage in the Cairns Botanic Gardens, Queensland, Australia
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Crown and inflorescences, Cairns Botanic Gardens, Queensland, Australia
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A row of Black palms growing in Sugarworld Gardens, May 2022
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Fruiting in Cairns Botanic Gardens, September 2022
References
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External links
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- View a map of historical sightings of this species at the Australasian Virtual Herbarium
- View observations of this species on iNaturalist
- View images of this species on Flickriver