Corypha lecomtei

Beccari

Lecomte palm

ArecaceaeShoots
Corypha lecomtei
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(c) Tobias Spanner, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Tobias Spanner
Corypha lecomtei
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Wikimedia Commons - 7 july :-)

What to Eat

Edible parts: Stem starch

Starch is extracted from the stem and eaten. Sap can be collected from the flower stalk.

Where to Find It

It is a tropical plant. It grows in seasonally dry monsoon forests and open areas along rivers and flood plains. It grows between 100-600 m above sea level.

Asia, Cambodia, Indochina, Indonesia, Laos, SE Asia, Thailand, Vietnam,

Countries: United Arab Emirates, Afghanistan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bangladesh, Bahrain, Brunei, Bhutan, China, Georgia, Indonesia, Israel, India, Iraq, Iran, Jordan, Japan, Kyrgyzstan, Cambodia, North Korea, South Korea, Kuwait, Kazakhstan, Laos, Lebanon, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Mongolia, Maldives, Malaysia, Nepal, Oman, Philippines, Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Syria, Thailand, Tajikistan, Timor-Leste, Turkmenistan, Turkey, Taiwan, Uzbekistan, Vietnam, Yemen

How to Identify

A solitary fan palm. It grows 10-15 m high. The trunk is 40-60 cm across. There are 15-25 leaves in the crown. The leaf stalk is 8 m long. The leaf blade is 4.5 cm long and has 50 segments. The flowering stalk is about 2.5 m long. The fruit are 3-5 cm across.

How to Grow

Plants are grown from seeds.

Wikipedia

Source ↗

Corypha lecomtei (common name Cay la buong) is a species of plant in the family Arecaceae. It is native to Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam. It is threatened by habitat loss. Although known locally for centuries, it was formally described in 1916 by the botanist Odoardo Beccari. Corypha lecomtei is one of the species used to make palm-leaf manuscripts.

Notes

There are 6-8 Corypha species.

Names & Synonyms

La buong, Lan, Las bun, Palem corypha, Samla:ng, Treang

Corypha laevis (Lour.) A Chev.
References (4)
  • Johnson, D.V., 1998, Tropical palms. Non-wood Forest products 10. FAO Rome. p 46
  • Kachenchart, B., et al, 2008, Phenology of Edible Plants at Sakaerat Forest. In Proceedings of the FORTROP II: Tropical Forestry Change in a Changing World. Bangkok, Thailand.
  • PROSEA handbook Volume 9 Plants yielding non-seed carbohydrates. p165
  • Sukarya, D. G., (Ed.) 2013, 3,500 Plant Species of the Botanic Gardens of Indonesia. LIPI p 773

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