Beauty unfolding

5 views
Skip to first unread message

dushyant parasher

unread,
Apr 30, 2008, 1:03:05 PM4/30/08
to indian...@googlegroups.com
Unfolding of Cycas Palm.
 
Experts must put up with the ignorants. Is Cycas revoluta and Sago Palm the same thing?

Dushyant Parasher


 
Cycas-revoluta,-Sago-Palm.jpg

Tabish

unread,
May 1, 2008, 4:00:00 PM5/1/08
to indiantreepix
I am no expert. However, Sago Palm is the common name of Cycas
revoluta. It looks misleading because the young specimens of this very
slow growing plant, have almost no stem, with leaves emerging out of
the ground. However, old plants do have a stem which makes them look
very much like a palm, although it is not a palm at all!
- Tabish


On Apr 30, 10:03 pm, "dushyant parasher" <dushyantparas...@gmail.com>
wrote:
> Unfolding of *Cycas* Palm.
>
> Experts must put up with the ignorants. Is *Cycas* revoluta and Sago
> *Palm*the same thing?
>
> Dushyant Parasher
>
> Cycas-revoluta,-Sago-Palm.jpg
> 177KViewDownload

Tabish

unread,
May 1, 2008, 4:05:11 PM5/1/08
to indiantreepix
A picture of older Sago Palms is here (click on "more images")
http://www.flowersofindia.net/catalog/slides/Sago%20Palm.html

J.M. Garg

unread,
May 2, 2008, 12:51:04 AM5/2/08
to Tabish, indiantreepix
Here are some extracts from Wikipedia link:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cycas_revoluta

Cycas revoluta (Sago Cycad), is a cycad native to southern Japan. Though often known by the common name of King Sago Palm, or just Sago Palm, it is not a palm at all, but a type of gymnosperm.

This very symmetrical plant supports a crown of shiny, dark green leaves on a thick shaggy trunk that is typically about 20 cm (8 in.) in diameter, sometimes wider. The trunk is very low to subterranean in young plants, but lengthens above ground with age. It can grow into very old specimens with 6–7 m (over 20 feet) of trunk; however, the plant is very slow-growing and requires about 50–100 years to achieve this height. Trunks can branch multiple times, thus producing multiple heads of leaves.

Cycas revoluta
Cycas revoluta

The leaves are a deep semiglossy green and about 50–150 cm (18-45 in.) long when the plants are of a reproductive age. They grow out into a feather-like rosette to 1 m (3 feet) in diameter. The crowded, stiff, narrow leaflets are 8–18 cm (~7 in.) long and have strongly recurved or revolute edges. The basal leaflets become more like spines. The petiole or stems of the Sago Cycad are 6–10 cm (2.5-4 in.) long and have small protective barbs that must be avoided.

Propagation of Cycas revoluta is either by seed or by removal of basal offsets. As with other cycads, it is dioecious, with the males bearing cones and the females bearing groups of megasporophylls . Pollination can be done naturally by insects or artificially.

--
With regards,
J.M.Garg
"We often ignore the beauty around us"
For learning about our trees & plants, please visit/ join Google e-group (Indiantreepix) http://groups.google.co.in/group/indiantreepix?hl=en
For my Birds, Butterflies, Trees, Landscape pictures etc., visit  http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/J.M.Garg
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages