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Washingtonia
Family: Arecaceae
Washingtonia image
Anne Barber
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Scott Zona in Flora of North America (vol. 22)
The two species are easy to distinguish when cultivated side by side, but they are sometimes difficult to identify from herbarium specimens. Analysis of flavonoids (S. Zona and R. Scogin 1988) can reliably distinguish the two species.

JANAS 32(1)
PLANT: Unbranched trees to 25 m tall, usually with persistent dead droop¬ing leaves forming a skirt. LEAVES: fan-shaped to 1 m broad, palmately dissected into 40-60 segments, their margins commonly with slender filaments; petioles to 1 m long, flattened, projecting into the blade as a winged arrowhead point, the margins usually spine-bearing. INFLORESCENCE: 3-4 m long. FLOWERS: numerous, perfect, white, 7-10 mm long; calyx lobes erect; corolla lobes reflexed; stamens 6; pistil 3-lo¬culed. FRUITS: dry, hard, ellipsoid drupes, 5-10 mm long. NOTES: 2 spp.; AZ, CA; nw Mex. (for G. Washington). Bailey, L. H. 1936. Gentes Herbarum 4:53-82. REFERENCES: Mason, Charles T., Jr. 1999. Arecaceae. Ariz.-Nev. Acad. Sci. 32(1).
Species within checklist: Rio Salado trees
Washingtonia ambigua
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Washingtonia brevipes
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Washingtonia claytonii
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Washingtonia filifera
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Washingtonia occidentalis
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Washingtonia purpurea
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Washingtonia robusta
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