Chamaerops humilis L.

Mediterranean fan palm (en), Doum (fr), Chamaerops humble (fr), Chamaerops nain (fr), Faux palmier doum (fr), Palmier nain (fr), Chamérops nain (fr)

Species

Angiosperms > Arecales > Arecaceae > Chamaerops

Characteristics

A fan palm. Plants can have one or many trunks. It can form suckers and produce clumps. They can be short or tall and with variegated leaves or plain. It is often 1 m tall but can be 6 m tall. The trunks usually have leaf base fibres covering them. The crown is made up of stiff spreading leaves. The leaf stalks are slender and flattened and have strong spines. The leaf blades are bluish-grey. The leaves are fan shaped like fingers on a hand. They are deeply divided. Flowering stalks arise among the leaf bases. Flowers are cream or yellow. Male and female flowers occur on separate plants. Both are necessary for fruit. The fruit are brown.
Life form perennial
Growth form tree
Growth support free-standing
Foliage retention evergreen
Sexuality monoecy
Pollination -
Spread endozoochory
Mature width (meter) 1.5
Mature height (meter) 2.0
Root system -
Rooting depth (meter) 1.5
Root diameter (meter) -
Flower color
Blooming months
JanFebMar
AprMayJun
JulAugSep
OctNovDec
Fruit color
Fruiting months -
Nitrogen fixer -
Photosynthetic pathway c3

Environment

It suits temperate and subtropical regions. It is very cold hardy. It is not affected by heavy frosts. It can tolerate a variety of soils but needs good drainage. In the Mediterranean they can be in hills up to 1000 m altitude. It prefers a sunny position. It grows in coastal and near coastal situations. It is often on rocky headlands and low hills. In the Indian Himalayas it grows between 1,200-1,400 m above sea level. It needs a temperature above-12°C. It can grow in arid places. It suits hardiness zones 8-10. Melbourne Botanical Gardens. In Hobart Botanical gardens.
More
Mainly in coastal and subcoastal areas, growing amongst shrubs and on scrubland, often on nutritionally poor, dry sandy or rocky soils on mountain slopes; at elevations up to 1,000 metres.
Light 4-8
Soil humidity 2-6
Soil texture 3-5
Soil acidity 2-7
Soil nutriment -
Hardiness (USDA) 9-10

Usage

The young shoots or suckers from the bottom of the plants are eaten. The young stems and roots are eaten. The ripe fruit are eaten raw.
Uses animal food environmental use fiber food fuel gene source material medicinal ornamental
Edible fruits leaves roots shoots stems
Therapeutic use Medicine (unspecified)
Human toxicity -
Animal toxicity -

Cultivation

Seeds should have the flesh removed and dried out for a few days before planting. Seeds will grow in a few weeks. Plants can be grown from fresh seed. Plants can also be divided.
Mode seedlings suckers
Germination duration (days) -
Germination temperacture (C°) -
Germination luminosity -
Germination treatment soaking
Minimum temperature (C°) -7
Optimum temperature (C°) 18 - 30
Size -
Vigor -
Productivity -

Images

Habit

Chamaerops humilis habit picture by Jean-René Girardeau (cc-by-sa)
Chamaerops humilis habit picture by Jochen Wagner (cc-by-sa)
Chamaerops humilis habit picture by Giorgio Fornara (cc-by-sa)

Leaf

Chamaerops humilis leaf picture by Catherine Fantaisie (cc-by-sa)
Chamaerops humilis leaf picture by David Horcajada Tejero (cc-by-sa)
Chamaerops humilis leaf picture by Aubin N (cc-by-sa)

Flower

Chamaerops humilis flower picture by Monteiro Henrique (cc-by-sa)
Chamaerops humilis flower picture by Monteiro Henrique (cc-by-sa)
Chamaerops humilis flower picture by Carlo Poggio (cc-by-sa)

Fruit

Chamaerops humilis fruit picture by Massimiliano Marcelli (cc-by-sa)
Chamaerops humilis fruit picture by Christian Grimm (cc-by-sa)
Chamaerops humilis fruit picture by Lucas (cc-by-sa)

Distribution

Chamaerops humilis world distribution map, present in Brazil, Dominica, Algeria, Spain, France, Italy, Libya, Morocco, Portugal, and Tunisia

Conservation status

Chamaerops humilis threat status: Least Concern

Identifiers

LSID urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:665917-1
WFO ID wfo-0000839941
COL ID TKRS
BDTFX ID 16542
INPN ID 90524
Wikipedia (EN) Link
Wikipedia (FR) Link

Synonyms

Chamaerops humilis Phoenix humilis Phoenix humilis Corypha humilis

Lower taxons

Chamaerops humilis var. argentea Chamaerops humilis var. humilis