List of Arecaceae genera

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Alexander palm (Archontophoenix alexandrae) in strong wind
Alexander palm (Archontophoenix alexandrae) - fruit

This is a list of all the genera in the botanical family Arecaceae, the palm family, based on Baker & Dransfield (2016),[1] which is a revised listing of genera given in the 2008 edition of Genera Palmarum.[2]

Taxonomy

This is a list of all the genera in the botanical family Arecaceae, the palm family, arranged by tribes and subtribes within the family.[1]

Genera Palmarum (2008) lists 183 genera.[2] Lanonia, Saribus, and the monotypic genera Jailoloa, Wallaceodoxa, Manjekia,[3] and Sabinaria, which were described after 2008, have also been included below. Ceratolobus, Daemonorops, Pogonotium, Wallichia, Lytocaryum, and the monotypic genera Retispatha, Pritchardiopsis, and Solfia have since been removed from Genera Palmarum (2008) as obsolete genera. This brings the total number of genera to 181 as of 2016.[1]

Phylogenetic tree of Arecaceae.[4]

Arecaceae
Arecoideae

Pelagodoxeae

Leopoldinieae

Cocoseae

Reinhardtieae

Roystoneeae

Podococceae

Sclerospermeae

Oranieae

Chamaedoreeae

Iriarteeae

Ceroxyloideae

Phytelepheae

Cyclospatheae

Ceroxyleae

Coryphoideae

Nypoideae

Calamoideae

Eugeissoneae

Subfamily Calamoideae

Obselete genera:

  • Calospatha (synonym of Calamus)[5] – Malay Peninsula
  • Daemonorops (syn. of Calamus)[5] – Malesia, Indochina
  • Ceratolobus (syn. of Calamus)[5] – Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, Borneo
  • Pogonotium (syn. of Calamus)[5] – northern Borneo

Subfamily
Nypoideae

Subfamily Coryphoideae

Obsolete genera:

Subfamily Ceroxyloideae

Subfamily
Arecoideae

Obsolete genera:

  • Lytocaryum – Brazil
  • Solfia
    – Samoa

Geographical distributions

Below are geographical distributions of all the genera in the botanical family Arecaceae, following the 2008 edition of Genera Palmarum (pp. 647-650).[2]

Islands and archipelagos with large numbers of endemic genera include

Mascarenes
.

Old World

Africa

Sub-Saharan Africa (i.e., Africa, but excluding North Africa) has 16 genera and 65 species.[2]

New World

There are 65 genera and 730 species in the New World.[2]

Extinct genera

See also

References

External links