Cycas media
Zamia palm
Zamia palm
Wikipedia links: Gymnosperms > Cycadales > Cycadaceae > Cycas media
Other links:
Common name: Zamia palm
Conservation status: unkown
Etymology:
x
Cones and seed:
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Leaves:
The dark green leathery, thick leaves are pinnately divided and grow in annual flushes from a massive apical bud
It is tolerant of bushfire and often re-foliates immediately following a dry season fire, before the beginning of the next rainy season
Stem & branches:
x
Roots:
x
Habit:
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Habitat:
Widespread in seasonally dry tropical sclerophyll woodlands close to the east coast
Distribution:
Mainly in Queensland, with scattered occurrences also in northern Northern Territory and Western Australia
Additional notes:
Use
All plant parts are considered highly toxic
However, the seeds were eaten by Aboriginal Australians after careful and extensive preparation to remove the toxins.
The 1889 book 'The Useful Native Plants of Australia records that common names included "Nut Palm" while Central Queensland Indigenous people referred to the plant as "Baveu" and that "An excellent farina is obtained from it
The nuts are deprived of their outer succulent cover (sarcocarp) and are then broken; and the kernels, having been roughly pounded, are dried three or four hours in the sun, then brought in a dilly-bag to a stream or pond, where they remain in the running water four or five days, and in stagnant water three or four days
By a touch of the fingers the proper degree of softness produced by maceration is ascertained
They are afterwards placed between the two stones mentioned under Colocasia macrorrhizon, reduced to a fine paste, and then baked under the ashes in the same way that our bush people bake their damper
Sources of information: