Livistona
Cabbage Palm
Cabbage Palm
L australis
L nitida
Wikipedia links: Angiosperms > Monocots > Arecales > Arecaceae > Livistona
Other links:
Common name: Fan Palm
Conservation status: unknown
Etymology:
Brown named the genus Livistona after Patrick Murray (1634–1671), Baron of Livingston
He was a botanist and horticulturist, who was largely responsible for establishing the botanical gardens in Edinburgh, Scotland
Flowers:
Fruit:
Leaves:
Rounded, costapalmate fan of numerous leaflets
Petiole is armed
Stem & branches:
Roots:
Habit:
Fan palms
Habitat:
Distribution:
Native to southeastern and eastern Asia, Australasia, and the Horn of Africa
The genus has a disjunct distribution, which is split into three contiguous areas
The range of Livistona carinensis in Africa is very far away from that of the other species in the genus. In 1983 John Dransfield and Natalie Whitford Uhl first suggested that this odd pattern was due to a formerly much more extensive distribution during the warmer and moister climate of the Miocene, including areas between it and the rest, but that prehistoric climate change split them
Later DNA evidence of a mass of ancient extinctions between L. carinensis and the rest is thought to corroborate the theory
The recognition of Saribus has split the remaining distribution into a group of species found in:
Australia and southern New Guinea,
another group of species in East and Southeast Asia
Species:
World: 27
Australia: 16 (1998 revision)
Additional notes:
Taxonomy
The genus was established by Robert Brown in his Prodromus Florae Novae Hollandiae (1810) to accommodate his descriptions of two species collected during an expedition to Australia
The names published by Brown were Livistona humilis and L. inermis, describing material he had collected in the north of Australia, a partial taxonomic revision in 1963 nominated the first of these as the lectotype
His collaborator Ferdinand Bauer, the botanist and master illustrator, produced artworks to accompany Brown's descriptions, but these were not published until 1838
In 1983 a species of palm from Somalia was formally transferred to the genus by John Dransfield and Natalie Whitford
The Australian members of the genus were subjected to a taxonomic revision by Tony Rodd in 1998
Rodd added five new Australian species, increasing the size of the genus
Another species was described from Vietnam in 2000In 2009 John Leslie Dowe published the latest monograph on the genus
Along with the Indonesian botanist Johanis P. Mogea and Anders Sánchez Barfod from Denmark, he had described five new species in the previous years, further swelling the genus
For much of the history of the genus, the species of the genus Saribus were classified within the genus Livistona
Phylogenetic studies using DNA comparisons of numerous species in the different genera in the Trachycarpeae tribe of palms, however, found that the species from the Philippines, New Guinea and other surrounding regions were more closely related to Pholidocarpus, Licuala and Johannesteijsmannia than they were to Livistona, which advocated separating the two groups taxonomically
The genus was thus revised again by Christine D. Bacon and William J. Baker in 2011, with Saribus split off and combined with Pritchardiopsis jeanneneyi, decreasing the genus again
Species
The classification of the genus has been the subject of a number of recent revisions which have reduced the number of species since the 2009 monograph
The following is an uncritical list of species:
Livistona alfredii - Western Australia
Livistona australis - NSW, Queensland, Victoria
Livistona benthamii - Queensland, NT; New Guinea
Livistona boninensis - Bonin Islands
Livistona carinensis - Djibouti, Somalia, Yemen
Livistona chinensis - Japan, China, Taiwan
Livistona concinna - Queensland
Livistona decora - Queensland
Livistona drudei - Queensland
Livistona eastonii - Western Australia
Livistona endauensis - Malaysia
Livistona exigua
Livistona fulva - Queensland
Livistona halongensis -Ha Long Bay Islands in Vietnam
Livistona humilis - NT
Livistona inermis - NT, Queensland
Livistona jenkinsiana - Bhutan, India, Myanmar, Thailand, China
Livistona lanuginosa - Queensland
Livistona lorophylla - NT, Western Australia
Livistona mariae - NT, Queensland
Livistona muelleri - Queensland; New Guinea
Livistona nasmophila - Western Australia
Livistona nitida - Australia: Queensland
Livistona saribus - Indochina, Malaysia, Borneo, Java, Philippines
Livistona speciosa - Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia, China Bangladesh
Livistona tahanensis - Malaysia
Livistona victoriae - Western Australia, NT
Formerly placed here
Pholidocarpus kingianus Livistona kingiana
Pritchardia gaudichaudii Livistona gaudichaudii
Pritchardia martii Livistona martii
Saribus brevifolius Livistona brevifolia
Saribus chocolatinus Livistona chocolatina
Saribus merrillii Livistona merrillii
Saribus papuanus Livistona papuana
Saribus rotundifolius Livistona rotundifolia, L. altissima, L. microcarpa, L. mindorensis
Saribus surru Livistona surru
Saribus tothur Livistona tothur
Saribus woodfordii Livistona woodfordii, L. beccariana
Ecology
Livistona species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species. In Australia the species Cephrenes trichopepla and C. augiades sperthias have been recorded on a number of different Livistona species, in Asia Elymnias hypermnestra and likely Gangara thyrsis feed on Livistona
A number of other Lepidoptera which do not naturally occur to the native range of the genus Livistona have been recorded feeding on these palms, including Batrachedra arenosella (recorded on L. subglobosa), Brassolis astyra astyra, Opsiphanes cassina, O. invirae and Paysandisia archon.
P. archon is a giant day-flying moth of which the caterpillars known to attack the piths of a number of these palm species, along with many other genera, at least in Europe, where neither the moth nor palms are native
It can kill the palm. It prefers genera of palm with more hairy trunks like Trachycarpus, Trithrinax or Chamaerops
Sources of information: