Butia lallemantii is a species of palm described in 2006. Unlike more familiar Butia species, this is a clustering, acaulescent species lacking an above-ground trunk. It was the third of such species of Butia described. It is caespitose; branching underground with normally 3-6 branches.[1] It grows to 60–160 cm tall, with 5-12 leaves with 24-40 leaflets a side.[2] The fruit are edible,[3] ovate-lanceolate, yellow-orange, 2.5-3.5 x 1.6-2.5 cm, with a reddish apex.[1]

Butia lallemantii
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Clade: Commelinids
Order: Arecales
Family: Arecaceae
Genus: Butia
Species:
B. lallemantii
Binomial name
Butia lallemantii
Deble & Marchiori [2006]

Etymology & common names

edit

The species epithet was chosen in honour of the German naturalist, doctor and explorer Robert Christian Avé-Lallemant, who mentioned these palms in his writings about his travels in 1858.[1] It is locally known as butiá-anão or butiazeiro-anão in Rio Grande do Sul,[1] also butia-zinho in Brazil,[3] and palmera butiacito in Uruguay.

Distribution

edit

It is found somewhat widespread in an area of southeast Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil[1] and in a fragmented cluster of 8 small subpopulations totalling some 300 plants in a part of Rivera Department in northern Uruguay.[4]

Habitat

edit

The habitat of this species is typically sandy grasslands (campos arenosos),[1] with red soil,[3] where it can locally be the dominant large plant.[5] It is also found growing in moist red sandy grasslands,[5] on low sandstone slopes and ledges, in open fields and pine forests in Uruguay,[4] as well as dry rocky fields in Brazil.[5] It flowers spring-summer, fruiting summer-autumn.

Taxonomy

edit

This population of Butia palms has been known for a long time (Avé-Lallemant mentioned them in his writings in 1858), but most researchers considered them to be stunted B. paraguayensis (fide Mattos [1977], Marchiori et al. [1995], Marchiori [2004]) until they were described as a new species by Deble and Marchiori in 2006.[1] Nonetheless, an Uruguayan study from 2011 found that it proved to be impossible to differentiate B. lallemantii and B. paraguayensis from each other genetically.[4] Likewise, in their Flora del Arbórea Uruguay of 2007, Brussa & Grela continued to consider it an ecotype.[4]

Similar species

edit

Other similar palm species growing in the area are B. paraguayensis and B. yatay, although these are larger to much larger, single-stemmed palms when mature. The fruits of these trees are different; more oval. B. yatay has almost double the number of pairs of leaflets.[1] The seeds are much rounder than B. paraguayensis with the eyes situated towards one end.[3] The pollen can also be differentiated from these two species; being very similar, but somewhat smaller.[6] B. campicola from Paraguay, being acaulescent, is also similar, although it does not occur near this species. It is much less caespitose, smaller in stature, and with greenish-purple fruits.[1]

A natural hybrid of this species with Syagrus romanzoffiana has been recorded in the wild in Uruguay (Brussa & Grela 2007).[4][5]

Uses

edit

It is sometimes cultivated.[5] It is advised to plant the palms in full sunlight. It is said to take -11 °C, but should be protected at -4 °C in the Netherlands.[7]

Conservation

edit

In Uruguay this species is now very rare (300 plants) due to habitat loss due to agricultural activities such as cattle ranching and forestry (pulpwood plantations of eucalyptus). Sheep and cattle eat the seedlings, preventing recruitment.[4] Brussa & Grela consider it (as B. paraguayensis) to be endangered in Uruguay in their Flora del Arbórea Uruguay.[4] As of 2017, like all four species of Butia native to Uruguay, it is protected by law. Adult palms may not be felled or moved without government permission.

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Paz Deble, Leonardo; Marchiori, José Newton Cardoso (30 November 2006). "Butia lallemantii, uma nova Arecaceae do Brasil". Balduinia. Revista do Herbário do Departamento de Ciências Florestais, Universidade Federal de Santa Maria, Centro de Ciencias Rurais, Santa Maria, Rio Grande do Sul, Brasil (in Portuguese). 9 (9): 1–3. doi:10.5902/2358198014032. ISSN 2358-1980. Retrieved 14 September 2018.
  2. ^ Paz Deble, Leonardo; Keller, Héctor A.; Da Silva Alves, Fabiano (August 2017). "Resurrection and epitypification of Butia poni (Arecaceae), a neglected palm micro-endemic to the grasslands of Misiones, Argentina". Phytotaxa. 316 (2): 171–180. doi:10.11646/phytotaxa.316.2.6. Retrieved 14 September 2018.
  3. ^ a b c d "Butia lallemantii - Pacsoa". PACSOA Palms and Cycads wiki. Palm and Cycad Societies of Australia. 11 November 2013. Retrieved 14 September 2018.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Gaiero, Paola; Mazzella, C.; Agostini, G.; Bertolazzi, S.; Rossato, M. (March 2011). "Genetic diversity among endangered Uruguayan populations of Butia Becc. species based on ISSR". Plant Systematics and Evolution. 292 (1–2): 105–116. doi:10.1007/s00606-010-0412-0. JSTOR 43558152. Retrieved 18 September 2018.
  5. ^ a b c d e "Butia lallemantii". Palmpedia - Palm Grower's Guide. 30 December 2015. Retrieved 14 September 2018.
  6. ^ Mourelle, Dominique; Gaiero, Paola; Speroni, Gabriela; Beri, Ángeles; Mazzella, María Cristina (2010). Variaciones en la morfología polínica de Butia lallemantii, Butia paraguayensis y Butia yatay, palmas (Arecaceae) nativas de Uruguay (poster). X Congreso Latinoamericano de Botánica. La Serena, Chile.
  7. ^ Wagelaar, Edwin (31 December 2017). "Het geslacht Butia". Palmexotica (in Dutch). Retrieved 3 October 2018.
edit