Cayman Nature Tours
Royal Botanic Gardens KEW and
OTEP –United Kingdom
Overseas Territories Environment Programme
Royal Botanic Gardens KEW and
OTEP –United Kingdom Overseas Territories Environment Programme
There
are 415 species and varieties native to the Cayman Islands.
Of these, 21 species of higher plants are known to be endemic with a further seven species representing endemic Caymanian varieties. Perhaps, the most
important species are those that are endemic to a single island. Grand Cayman lays claim to the greatest number of endemic
species: Hohenbergia
caymanensis, Salvia
caymanensis, Pisonia margaretiae, Dendrophylax
fawcettii, Scolosanthus roulstonii, Casearia staffordiae, Agalinus kingsii
and Aegiphyla
caymanensis. Grand Cayman also has
three endemic varieties: Pectis caymanensis var. robusta,
Terminalia
eriostachya var. margaretiae, and Myrmecophila
thompsoniana var. thompsoniana. Cayman Brac has one
endemic species, Verbesina caymanensis and one endemic variety: Epiphyllum
phyllanthus var. plattsii. One endemic species is
restricted to Little Cayman, Chamaesyce
caymanensis. There are also three sister island endemic species
(i.e. restricted to two of the Cayman Islands)
and one endemic variety. In addition, twenty four species are considered
near-endemic (i.e. native to the Caymans and one other island) and forty four
are local regional (i.e. native the NW Caribbean region). The Cayman Islands
are also home to ten Caribbean endemic genera; Leptocereus (1 sp.), Chascotheca
(1 sp.), Picrodendron
(1 sp.), Petitia
(1 sp.), Dendropemon
(2 spp.), Neoregnellia (1sp), Tolumnia (2 sp.), Margaritopsis
(1 sp.), Scolosanthus
(1 sp.) and Hypelate (1 sp.).
Ghost Orchids and the Ironwood Forest, Grand Cayman.
Maybe it will take an Orchid to Save a Forest
Ironwood Forest, Grand CaymanThere are many Critically Endangered and Endangered plants in
Grand Cayman's IRONWOOD FOREST, SE of George Town, behind the University College of the Cayman Islands.
Cayman Islands Ghost Orchid - Dendrophylax fawcettii Rolfe
Grand Cayman endemic
Ironwood Forest maps and pictures
Cayman Islands endemic Ironwood - Chionanthus caymanensis, Family OLEACEAE, is the predominant tree.
Cocytius antaeus is the most probable pollinator of Cayman's Ghost Orchid.
Florida Ghost Orchid visited by the Giant Sphinx Moth
in south Florida’s Big Cypress National Preserve – watch the video.
University of Florida scientists work to
preserve the endangered Ghost Orchid
Dendrophylax lindenii
History of Botanical Collections
OLEACEAE p.592
Chionanthus
caymanensis Stearn,
Bot. Notiser
132:58 (1979)
Ironwood
OLEACEAE Olive Family
Cayman Islands endemic. Endangered
FLORA of the CAYMAN ISLANDS by George R. Proctor, 2012, published by Kew p.595, Fig.221, Pl.58
Wild Trees in the Cayman Islands BY Fred Burton, illustrated by Penny Clifford, 2007, p.144/220
Ironwood
OLEACEAE Olive Family
Cayman Islands endemic. Endangered
FLORA of the CAYMAN ISLANDS by George R. Proctor, 2012, published by Kew p.595, Fig.221, Pl.58
Wild Trees in the Cayman Islands BY Fred Burton, illustrated by Penny Clifford, 2007, p.144/220
Threatened Plants of the Cayman
Islands The Red List by Frederic J. Burton, 2008, p.49
There
are many plants around the world with the common name ‘Ironwood’, but Chionanthus caymanensis, the tree called
Ironwood in the Cayman Islands is endemic – it grows only on Grand Cayman, Little Cayman and Cayman Brac and nowhere else in the
world, in rocky woodlands, close to a fresh water table.
Grand Cayman Nature Tours
Cayman Islands Ironwood grows to 10 m tall.
Ironwood tree and Banana Orchid (Myrmecophila thomsoniana var. thomsoniana),
two Cayman endemics.
two Cayman endemics.
Photo: Ann Stafford, Lower Valley forest, Jan.13, 2002
Grand Cayman Nature Tours
Cayman Islands Ironwood grows to 10 m tall.
Ironwood tree with Old George (Hohenbergia caymanensis), a giant Bromeliad, growing in its branches, in a George Town garden. Both are Cayman endemics.
Photo: Ann Stafford, Aug. 23, 2002.
Cayman Islands ENDEMICS pictures
Plants and creatures
The leaves are arranged in exactly OPPOSITE pairs.
Photo: Ann Stafford, Grand Cayman, Nov. 13,2006.
The flowers are small, fragrant and white in many-flowered panicles.
Ironwood in bloom in a George Town garden.
Photo: Ann Stafford, May 1, 2011.
Many-flowered panicle.
Photo: Ann Stafford, George Town garden, Grand Cayman, May 1, 2011.
Ironwood flowers and leaves from a George Town garden.
Cayman’s Ironwood is a culturally significant tree.
Cousin Cora's Cottage, Boggy Sand Road, West Bay.
Photo: Lorna McCubbin, 1998
Cousin Cora's Cottage, made of wattle and daub with ironwood posts,
Boggy Sand Road, West Bay.
Photo: Lorna McCubbin, 1998
Cousin Cora's Cottage showing wattle and daub interior with ironwood posts,
Boggy Sand Road, West Bay.
Photo: Lorna McCubbin, 1998
The heavy wood is very hard, strong, termite and water-rot resistant, not inclined to warp. It was traditionally used for the foundation posts of houses.
Lorna McCubbin in her wattle-and-daub house,Cousin Cora's Cottage
Photo: Ann Stafford, Boggy Sand Road, West Bay, Jan.19, 2003
Photo: Ann Stafford,Jan.19, 2003
Cayman CULTURAL pictures
Step-wells, traditional buildings, games, arts and crafts, house-shaped grave markers, ships, Cayman catboats, monuments, maps, stamps, Hell and more.
Step-wells, traditional buildings, games, arts and crafts, house-shaped grave markers, ships, Cayman catboats, monuments, maps, stamps, Hell and more.
Photo: Ann Stafford, Feb.22, 2004
Ironwood - living fence post, Grand Cayman.
Photo: Ann Stafford, July 31, 2006
Ironwood - Chionanthus caymanensis is the predominant tree in the Ironwood Forest,
George Town, Grand Cayman.
University College of the Cayman Islands hall has white roof (mid-right).
Photo: Lois Blumenthal, June 2007.
Ironwood - Chionanthus caymanensis, Endangered endemic,
is the predominant tree in the Ironwood Forest.
Old George - Hohenbergia caymanensis, a Critically Endangered Grand Cayman endemic giant Bromeliad,
grows on the pinnacle rock and up in the trees.
Photo: Ann Stafford, Sept.11, 2005.
Ironwood with Resurrection Fern - Polypodium polypodioides growing on the trunk.
Photo: Ann Stafford, Oct.9, 2005
Ironwood - Chionanthus caymanensis, Endangered endemic,
is the predominant tree in the Ironwood Forest.
Old George - Hohenbergia caymanensis, a Critically Endangered Grand Cayman endemic giant Bromeliad,
grows on the pinnacle rock and up in the trees.
Photo: Ann Stafford, Sept.11, 2005.
Ironwood with Resurrection Fern - Polypodium polypodioides growing on the trunk.
Photo: Ann Stafford, Oct.9, 2005
Pictures of Cayman Islands plants
Endangered Ironwood with other native trees in a George Town garden,
Mahogany - Swietenia mahagoni Endangered, Spanish Elm - Cordia gerascanthus Endangered, Broadleaf - Cordia sebestena var. caymanensis Vulnerable, Popnut - Thespesia populnea Endangered, Silver Thatch - Coccothrinax proctorii Endangered, Bull Hoof - Bauhinia divaricata and Burn Nose - Daphnopsis americana Critically Endangered.
Mahogany - Swietenia mahagoni Endangered, Spanish Elm - Cordia gerascanthus Endangered, Broadleaf - Cordia sebestena var. caymanensis Vulnerable, Popnut - Thespesia populnea Endangered, Silver Thatch - Coccothrinax proctorii Endangered, Bull Hoof - Bauhinia divaricata and Burn Nose - Daphnopsis americana Critically Endangered.
Silver Thatch - Coccothrinax proctorii and Ironwood,
2 Cayman endemics, Colliers Wilderness Road.
ASTERACEAE/COMPOSITAE p.634
History
It
was first recorded in the botanical literature of Grand Cayman in 1899 by Charles
F. Millspaugh M.D. Department of Botany Curator, Field Columbian Museum, Chicago, Illinois.
Millspaugh was a guest of Allison V. Armour, the Chicago
meat-packing millionaire, on a West Indian cruise of the yacht ‘Utowana’; they
visited the Cayman Islands during February,
1899. The chief set of Millspaugh’s specimens is in the herbarium of the Field
Museum of Natural History in Chicago.
Millspaugh published lists of his collection.
On
February 8, 1899, the ‘Utowana’ stopped at The Creek ,‘Cayman Brae’ (Cayman
Brac) A Norther sprang up in the night,
so they had to leave for a point further
west, where they anchored. They did some more collecting and then sailed on to Little Cayman, but found no safe harbour. They reached Georgetown (sic), Grand Cayman
after dark on Feb. 9. The Health Officer forbade them to land as their last
port (Port Antonio, Jamaica)
was reported to be infected with measles.
They were, however, given permission to go ashore elsewhere as long as
they kept away from any other person or dwelling. Because of the Norther, they
anchored at ‘Spot
Bay’ (Spotts).
Tea
Banker was originally called Pectis cubensis, it had been found in Cuba.
Millspaugh found it on Grand Cayman on Feb.14, 1899: ‘Fine full masses of this
species were found in the sand of the roadside at Spot
Bay, Grand Cayman
(1279), but not seen elsewhere on the island. It is called
"Flat-weed," and is used in infusion as a stomachic tonic.’ (Millspaugh,
1889)
Culturally
Significant
In
a two page article entitled ‘Bush Medicine’, published in the February 1973 issue
of the Nor’wester magazine, Ena Watler
wrote: “It has fine green leaves, grows real close to the ground, and has tiny
yellow flowers. Stick a bunch of it in boiling water and add some sugar and
you’ll have a nice cup of tea to improve your appetite”. (Watler, 1973)
Tea Banker - Pectis caymanensis, there were a lot of plants
in the sandy beach ridge yard of Capt. Carl Bush, #972 South Church St, Grand Cayman.
in the sandy beach ridge yard of Capt. Carl Bush, #972 South Church St, Grand Cayman.
The house has been moved and in recent years no Tea Banker has been seen here.
Photo: Ann Stafford, Oct.30, 2002.
Critically
Endangered
Tea
Banker occurs in two varieties P. caymanensis var. caymanensis, Cuba, Grand Cayman, Little Cayman and Cayman
Brac, near endemic, and P. caymanensis var. robusta, Grand
Cayman endemic. Both are Critically Endangered. (Burton, 2008)
In
recent years it has been found growing in some beach-ridge cemeteries. Do the
plants die naturally in a prolonged dry season and sprout during the rainy
season? Might it be an annual? This is a challenge to monitor, because it grows
amongst Zoysia grass, Donkey Weed Stylosanthes hamata and other ground covers. It
may have been pulled up and used for making tea. Cemeteries are weeded and
raked. Specimens of the plants I have
found from four different locations on Grand Cayman all key out to P. c. var.
robusta, the Grand Cayman endemic.
Tea Banker - typical beach ridge habitat
Photo: Ann Stafford, South Sound, Grand Cayman, Nov.8, 2008
Sister Islands
Has
anybody found Tea Banker on the Brac or Little Cayman
in recent years? var. caymanesis occurs
in sandy clearings or soil-filled pockets of exposed limestone.
Conservation
(P.c. var. robusta)
It
is difficult to transplant. Although it can be grown from seed, it seems to
require salt, such as at a beach ridge habitat, and fresh water, (when rain
falls after the dry season), for the seeds to germinate.
Tea Banker - typical beach ridge habitat
Photo: Ann Stafford, South Sound, Grand Cayman, Dec.1, 2013
Botanical description
Proctor, George R. FLORA of the Cayman Islands, 1984, and second edition (in press):
Matlike
perennial herb, subwoody at the base and with a woody taproot, the stems often
pinkish; leaves oblong-linear or very narrowly lanceolate, 4-12 mm long,
minutely scabrid toward the apex and sharply mucronate, and with 4-6 pairs of
long cilia near the base. Peduncles mostly 5-10 mm long; ligules yellow, more
or less longitudinally nerved. Achenes dark brown, minutely striate.
Occurs
in two varieties which can be distinguished as follows:
Pectis
caymanensis var. caymanensis Grand
Cayman, Little Cayman, Cayman Brac and Cuba
Stems
glabrous, seldom more than 12cm long; phyllaries ciliolate, c. 3mm long;
ligules c. 3mm long;
achenes
2 - 2.5mm long, strigose with reddish hairs.
Grand
Cayman, Little Cayman, Cayman Brac and Cuba.
Occurs
in sandy clearings or soil-filled pockets of exposed limestone. Frequently used
to make a pleasantly aromatic tea.
Pectis
caymanensis var. robusta Proctor in
Sloanea 1:4 1977
Stems
sparingly hispidulous in lines, up to 25cm long or more; phyllaries glabrous,
c.6mm long; ligules c. 5 mm long; achene
3 – 3.2mm long, glabrous or minutely white-strigillose toward the base.
Grand Cayman endemic. Found growing in
gravelly sand near the sea.
This
variety is generally larger and coarser in appearance than var. caymanensis.
Isotype of Pectis caymanensis var. robusta Proctor
Isotype of Pectis caymanensis var. robusta Proctor
Pectis caymanensis var. robusta Proctor
Critically Endangered, culturally significant Grand Cayman endemic,
small, aromatic mat-forming herb, South Sound sandy beach ridge,
virtual herbarium image, scanned at 600%.
P. Ann van B. Stafford, June 6, 2006.
P. Ann van B. Stafford, June 6, 2006.
Pectis caymanensis var. robusta Proctor
Critically Endangered Grand Cayman endemic,
small, aromatic mat-forming herb, South Sound sandy beach ridge,
scanned virtual herbarium image, P. Ann van B. Stafford, Dec.1, 2006.
Tea Banker - Pectis caymanensis - little clumps growing amongst the Zoysia grass,
Bodden Town Cemetery beach ridge.
Photo: Ann Stafford, Feb.19, 2010
Tea Banker - Pectis caymanensis - little clumps growing amongst the Zoysia grass,
Old Man Bay Cemetery beach ridge.
Photo: Ann Stafford, Feb.13, 2010
Please
report observations to Cayman Islands Department of Environment.
References:
Burton, F.J. Threatened Plants of the Cayman Islands The
Red List 2008 Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
Millspaugh,
Charles F. Antillean Cruise of the Yacht Utowana Dec. 1898 – Mar. 1899, Field Museum of
Natural History, Chicago www.archive.org/stream/plantaeutowanaepfimill/plantaeutowanaepfimill_djvu.txt
Accessed Nov.11, 2009
Proctor,
George R. Flora of the Cayman Islands 1984
and second edition (in press) Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
Watler,
Ena Bush Medicine, Nor’wester magazine, Feb. 1973 Cayman Islands
National Archive
Plantae
Utowanae. Plants collected in Bermuda, Porto Rico, St.
Thomas, Culebras, Santo Domingo, Jamaica, Cuba,
the Caymans, Cozumel, Yucatan and the Alacran shoals. Dec. 1898 to
Mar. 1899. The Antillean cruise of the yacht Utowana. Mr. Allison V. Armour,
owner and master (1900)
Cayman Islands Department of Environment Tea Banker - Pectis caymanensis Species Action Plan
Cayman Islands Department of Environment Tea Banker - Pectis caymanensis Species Action Plan
CaymANNature Flora pictures
Photos and scanned virtual herbarium images of Cayman Islands plants.Rochefortia acanthophora (Spiny Confus'em, Greenheart Ebony) and
Sideroxylon horridum (Green Thorn) Endangered compared.
Spiny Confus'em has brittle spines, whereas Green Thorn spines are rigid and very sharp. FLORA of the CAYMAN ISLANDS by George R. Proctor: 2012: pp.345, 438, 570.
Grand Cayman, P. Ann van B. Stafford Oct.1, 2006.
Cayman Herbarium
Scanned virtual herbarium images of Cayman Islands plants for identification.Spiny Confus'em, Greenheart Ebony - Rochefortia acanthophora, BORAGINACEAE.
Dioecious. Fruit with 4 seeds.
Jasmin Lane, Grand Cayman, P. Ann van B. Stafford, Sept.17, 2006.
Greater and Lesser Antilles.
FLORA of the CAYMAN ISLANDS by George R. Proctor: 2012 p.570 and 438
Securinega acidoton - Green Ebony, EUPHORBIACEAE (ovary 3-locular) has not be found in the Cayman Islands.
The book is available from the National Trust for the Cayman Islands and local bookstores for CI$30.
Review of the FLORA of the CAYMAN ISLANDS 2nd. Edition 2012 by George R. Proctor, p.138-142, by -Lee B. Kass, L. H. Bailey Hortorium, Department of Plant Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA. lbk7@cornell.edu
Plant Science Bulletin 59 (3) 2013
Cayman Islands PLANTS Red List, 2007
Carlos D. Rodriquez, October 1993Cayman Islands PLANTS Red List, 2007
Know Cayman's Native Plants -
Knowledge DOES Grow on Trees!
Cayman Nature FAQ
The Cayman Islands are unique because of their relative geographic
isolation in the north-western Caribbean Sea and have plants and creatures
which occur naturally only in Cayman, or Cayman and Cuba,
or Cayman and Jamaica.
Cayman common names for
plants and creatures are often different from those for the same species found
elsewhere.
Different
countries have different common names,
sometimes more than one for the same plant, or one name may refer to several
different plants. Several trees around the world are called Ironwood, but Cayman’s culturally important Ironwood trees are only
found in the Cayman Islands - Chionanthus caymanensis . Scientific names, avoid confusion of
which plant is being referred to. Even though there are many plants, many don’t
have Cayman common names – especially if they didn’t have a use. Some common
names reflect how the plants were encountered, for example Shake Hand trees. In
Cayman’s forests and dry rocky woodlands there are tall slender trees, some
very old and extremely slow-growing, seemingly growing out of cliff-rock (karst
limestone), trees such as Ironwood
and Silver Thatch (both endemic),
Bastard Ironwood, Bitter Plum, Candlewood, Smoke Wood, Pompero, Wild Fig,
Cherry, Bastard Cherry, Strawberry, Bastard Strawberry, Spanish Elm, Cedar,
Mahogany, Bastard Mahogany, Fustic, Bastard Fustic, and shrubs Duppy Bush and
Rosemary. If any of these plants occur in the United
States, they would be found in south Florida
and the Florida Keys, where they may be
endangered. The US
common names are almost always different.
The Cayman Islands are unique because of their relative geographic isolation in the north-western Caribbean Sea and have plants and creatures which occur naturally only in Cayman, or Cayman and Cuba, or Cayman and Jamaica.
Different
countries have different common names,
sometimes more than one for the same plant, or one name may refer to several
different plants. Several trees around the world are called Ironwood, but Cayman’s culturally important Ironwood trees are only
found in the Cayman Islands - Chionanthus caymanensis . Scientific names, avoid confusion of
which plant is being referred to. Even though there are many plants, many don’t
have Cayman common names – especially if they didn’t have a use. Some common
names reflect how the plants were encountered, for example Shake Hand trees. In
Cayman’s forests and dry rocky woodlands there are tall slender trees, some
very old and extremely slow-growing, seemingly growing out of cliff-rock (karst
limestone), trees such as Ironwood
and Silver Thatch (both endemic),
Bastard Ironwood, Bitter Plum, Candlewood, Smoke Wood, Pompero, Wild Fig,
Cherry, Bastard Cherry, Strawberry, Bastard Strawberry, Spanish Elm, Cedar,
Mahogany, Bastard Mahogany, Fustic, Bastard Fustic, and shrubs Duppy Bush and
Rosemary. If any of these plants occur in the United
States, they would be found in south Florida
and the Florida Keys, where they may be
endangered. The US
common names are almost always different.
Plant Uses
The Cayman Islands were discovered by Columbus in 1503.
Permanent settlement came later, in the 1730’s. Indigenous plants were used for
shelter, food, clothing, healing, everyday utility, boatbuilding, livelihood
and export. They are part of the history, culture and identity of the Cayman Islands and what makes them unique. We do not have
large wild animals, but we do have an interesting diversity of wildlife, for
which plants provide food and shelter. Native plants and animals are
interdependent, and are part of intricate food webs.
What is a Cayman Islands
native (indigenous) species?
A Cayman Islands native (indigenous) species is one that occurs naturally in
the Cayman Islands without direct or indirect
human actions. Some plants and animals are native to only one or two of the
three Cayman Islands.
What is a Cayman Islands endemic species?
An endemic
species is one that originated or evolved in a particular place, and that
situation won't change in the future. The Cayman
Islands have 28 endemic taxa (species and varieties) of plant and
5 endemic subspecies of butterfly.
How many Cayman Islands
native (indigenous) plants are there?
415 taxa
(species and varieties) formed the original, ancient flora of Grand Cayman, Little Cayman and Cayman Brac.
What is a naturalized plant species?
A species
introduced from another region that becomes naturalized, maintains itself and
reproduces successfully in competition with the native (indigenous) vegetation.
There are some 700 plants, both native and naturalized, (including many
grasses), that have been recorded growing in the wild in Cayman.
A Cayman Islands native (indigenous) species is one that occurs naturally in the Cayman Islands without direct or indirect human actions. Some plants and animals are native to only one or two of the three Cayman Islands.
What is a Cayman Islands endemic species?
Cayman Islands Plants arranged in FAMILY sequence as in
FLORA of the CAYMAN ISLANDS by George R. Proctor, 2012
MYRTACEAE p.403
Pimento, Allspice Tree - Pimenta dioica (L.) Merr.
Native to Mexico, Central American and the Caribbean
The tree is called Pimento and the berries Allspice. The
cured berries combine the flavour qualities of Cinnamon, Cloves, Pepper and
Nutmeg.
Tree: to 20 m tall; young branches flattened and
4-angled.
Bark: mottled cream, brown and tan, twisting lumpy
surface that peels off in flakes
Leaves: Opposite, glandular dots more or less pellucid,
strong aroma of pimento (allspice) when crushed
Flowers: inflorescence - panicle 6-12 cm long, many
flowered, petals white, stamens numerous.
Individual
flowers sometimes unisexual or apparently so.
Fruit:
a fleshy, aromatic, 2-seeded berry, black when ripe.
Seeds:
tough seed coat; the seeds lose their viability quickly; germination is more likely
when the seeds have passed through the gut of a bird.
The green fruits turn black when ripe. George Town, Grand Cayman, Jan. 15, 2014.
3 Pimento trees on School Road, George Town, Grand Cayman July 21, 2003
Pimento trees on School Road, George Town, Grand Cayman after Hurricane Ivan (Sept. 2004)
Uses:
the dried fruits (picked full-size when still green) are used as spice, for
flavouring numerous foods. Oil extracted from seeds, leaves, and bark is used
to scent cosmetics, foods, and many other things. The wood has various uses. Young
saplings are used as walking sticks.
Pimento tree in a garden on South Church St, Grand Cayman, Feb. 6, 2009
Pimento
Dram is a Jamaican liqueur with a rum base flavoured with Allspice.
Pimenta dioica:
“This species was at
first thought to be solely an introduced cultivated plant until the dead
remains of several very large old trees were found in a George Town building site. Later, documents
were found in the Cayman Archives that recorded the export of significant amounts of Allspice from the Cayman
Islands in the early to mid nineteenth century. It appears
that groves of Pimento trees formerly grew in the part of Grand Cayman that is
now urban George Town,
but all original trees have now disappeared. Meanwhile, a few young trees are
now developing from seeds or seedlings brought from Jamaica. However, the evidence
suggests that the Allspice tree should be considered indigenous to Grand Cayman.”
George R. Proctor,
Flora of the Cayman Islands, 2012, p.406
Early
Spanish explorers found the tree growing in Jamaica. It was identified in about
the year 1509 and is closely related to the Bay Tree and to Cloves.
Click here for more pictures and information: Jamaican Pimento
EUPHORBIACEAE p.436
Subfamily 1: PHYLLANTHOIDEAE
Click here
for more information the plant and how to grow it.
Natives for Your Neighborhood - Bourreria venosa
VERBENACEAE p.570
The Fiddlewoods
Cayman Islands Plants arranged in FAMILY sequence as in
FLORA of the CAYMAN ISLANDS by George R. Proctor, 2012
Uses: the dried fruits (picked full-size when still green) are used as spice, for flavouring numerous foods. Oil extracted from seeds, leaves, and bark is used to scent cosmetics, foods, and many other things. The wood has various uses. Young saplings are used as walking sticks.
Pimento Dram is a Jamaican liqueur with a rum base flavoured with Allspice.
Pimenta dioica:
MYRTACEAE p.403
Pimento, Allspice Tree - Pimenta dioica (L.) Merr.
Native to Mexico, Central American and the Caribbean
The tree is called Pimento and the berries Allspice. The
cured berries combine the flavour qualities of Cinnamon, Cloves, Pepper and
Nutmeg.
Tree: to 20 m tall; young branches flattened and
4-angled.
Bark: mottled cream, brown and tan, twisting lumpy
surface that peels off in flakes
Leaves: Opposite, glandular dots more or less pellucid,
strong aroma of pimento (allspice) when crushed
Flowers: inflorescence - panicle 6-12 cm long, many
flowered, petals white, stamens numerous.
Individual
flowers sometimes unisexual or apparently so.
Fruit:
a fleshy, aromatic, 2-seeded berry, black when ripe.
Seeds:
tough seed coat; the seeds lose their viability quickly; germination is more likely
when the seeds have passed through the gut of a bird.
The green fruits turn black when ripe. George Town, Grand Cayman, Jan. 15, 2014.
3 Pimento trees on School Road, George Town, Grand Cayman July 21, 2003
Pimento trees on School Road, George Town, Grand Cayman after Hurricane Ivan (Sept. 2004)
Uses: the dried fruits (picked full-size when still green) are used as spice, for flavouring numerous foods. Oil extracted from seeds, leaves, and bark is used to scent cosmetics, foods, and many other things. The wood has various uses. Young saplings are used as walking sticks.
Pimento tree in a garden on South Church St, Grand Cayman, Feb. 6, 2009
Pimento Dram is a Jamaican liqueur with a rum base flavoured with Allspice.
Pimenta dioica:
“This species was at
first thought to be solely an introduced cultivated plant until the dead
remains of several very large old trees were found in a George Town building site. Later, documents
were found in the Cayman Archives that recorded the export of significant amounts of Allspice from the Cayman
Islands in the early to mid nineteenth century. It appears
that groves of Pimento trees formerly grew in the part of Grand Cayman that is
now urban George Town,
but all original trees have now disappeared. Meanwhile, a few young trees are
now developing from seeds or seedlings brought from Jamaica. However, the evidence
suggests that the Allspice tree should be considered indigenous to Grand Cayman.”
George R. Proctor,
Flora of the Cayman Islands, 2012, p.406
Early
Spanish explorers found the tree growing in Jamaica. It was identified in about
the year 1509 and is closely related to the Bay Tree and to Cloves.
Click here for more pictures and information: Jamaican Pimento
EUPHORBIACEAE p.436
Subfamily 1: PHYLLANTHOIDEAE
Click here for more information the plant and how to grow it.
VERBENACEAE p.570
The Fiddlewoods
White
Fiddlewood - Citharexylum spinosum = C.
fruticosum, Endangered, Family: VERBENACEAE.
Tree with OPPOSITE leaves, white flowers are very fragrant in the evening.
Fruit a juicy, berry-like drupe containing two 2-seeded nutlets. Orange fruits turn shiny black, which birds love to eat. The tree grows readily from seeds, suitable for Native Plants Landscaping.
Flora of the Cayman Islands, Proctor 2012 p.579, Plate 56
Photo: Ann Stafford, Grand Cayman, Oct.17, 2009
This tree is called Florida Fiddlewood in the US.
Click here for more information about the plant and how to grow it:
Natives for Your Neighborhood (Florida)
Tree with OPPOSITE leaves, white flowers are very fragrant in the evening.
Fruit a juicy, berry-like drupe containing two 2-seeded nutlets. Orange fruits turn shiny black, which birds love to eat. The tree grows readily from seeds, suitable for Native Plants Landscaping.
Flora of the Cayman Islands, Proctor 2012 p.579, Plate 56
Photo: Ann Stafford, Grand Cayman, Oct.17, 2009
This tree is called Florida Fiddlewood in the US.
Click here for more information about the plant and how to grow it:
Natives for Your Neighborhood (Florida)
Fiddlewood,
Petitia domingensis, Endangered,
Family: VERBENACEAE,
Tree with OPPOSITE leaves. Grand Cayman, Cayman Brac, and Bahamas and Greater Antilles.
Fruit, red when ripe, a small drupe containing a single 2-4 seeded stone.
Birds love to eat the fruits, particularly Mockingbirds and White-crowned pigeons. The wood is hard, heavy and strong and was used for fence posts, furniture and general construction.
Tree with OPPOSITE leaves. Grand Cayman, Cayman Brac, and Bahamas and Greater Antilles.
Fruit, red when ripe, a small drupe containing a single 2-4 seeded stone.
Birds love to eat the fruits, particularly Mockingbirds and White-crowned pigeons. The wood is hard, heavy and strong and was used for fence posts, furniture and general construction.
he tree grows readily from seeds, suitable for Native Plants
Landscaping.
Flora of the Cayman Islands, Proctor 2012 p.584, Plate 56
Photo: Ann Stafford, Grand Cayman, Dec.8, 2006.
Flora of the Cayman Islands, Proctor 2012 p.584, Plate 56
Photo: Ann Stafford, Grand Cayman, Dec.8, 2006.
I NEED MORE PLANTS PLEASE
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