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  2. Chrysalidocarpus lutescens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chrysalidocarpus_lutescens

    Chrysalidocarpus lutescens, also known by its synonym Dypsis lutescens [2] and as golden cane palm, areca palm, [3] yellow palm, [3] butterfly palm, [3] or bamboo palm, [4] is a species of flowering plant in the family Arecaceae, native to Madagascar and naturalized in the Andaman Islands, Thailand, Vietnam, Réunion, El Salvador, Cuba, Puerto Rico, the Canary Islands, southern Florida, Haiti ...

  3. Dypsis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dypsis

    Dypsis is a genus of flowering plants in the family Arecaceae.They are slender, evergreen palms with yellow flowers carried in panicles amongst the pinnate leaves. Many Dypsis species have aerial branching (above the main trunk), a rare growth habit among palms. [2]

  4. Chamaedorea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chamaedorea

    Chamaedorea is a genus of 107 species of palms, native to subtropical and tropical regions of the Americas. [2] [3] They are small palms, growing to 0.3–6 m (1 ft 0 in – 19 ft 8 in) tall with slender, cane-like stems, growing in the understory in rainforests, and often spreading by means of underground runners, forming clonal colonies.

  5. Palme d'Or - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palme_d'Or

    The palm is made from 4.16 oz (118 g) of 18-carat yellow gold while the branch's base forms a small heart. The Palme d'or rests on a dainty crystal cushion shaped like an emerald-cut diamond. [11] A single piece of cut crystal forms a cushion for the palm, which is hand-cast into a wax mould and now presented in a case of blue Morocco leather.

  6. Climbing palm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Climbing_palm

    The habit of "climbing palm" is one of the terms used for referring to the diversity of habits of palm stems, the rest are "arborescent palms" or tree palms, "shrub palms" and "acaulescent palms", as defined in Dransfield (1978 [2] cited in Kubitzki ed. 1998, [3] see also Uhl & Dransfield 1987 Genera Palmarum).

  7. Licuala - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Licuala

    Licuala spp. are fan palms, with the leaves mostly circular in outline, sometimes undivided but more usually divided into wedge-shaped segments.Licuala acutifida is the source of cane for the walking stick nicknamed the Penang-lawyer by colonials, probably from the Malay phrase pinang liyar for a wild areca, although the term may also refer to the use of these canes as deadly knobkerries to ...

  8. Ptychosperma macarthurii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ptychosperma_macarthurii

    Ptychosperma macarthurii, commonly known as the Macarthur palm, is a species of tree in the palm family Arecaceae. Its native range is northern Cape York Peninsula in Queensland with a number of disjunct populations in the Northern Territory and New Guinea . [ 3 ]

  9. Rattan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rattan

    Rattan cane is also used traditionally to make polo mallets, though only a small portion of cane harvested (roughly 3%) is strong, flexible, and durable enough to be made into sticks for polo mallets, and popularity of rattan mallets is waning next the more modern variant, fibrecanes.