Butia pubispatha is a very small and extremely rare species of Butia Arecaceae with an underground stem; endemic to the east of the state of Paraná in southeastern Brazil.
At least one seed vendor has used the name broom jelly palm for this species.
It has 4-13 leaves; these have a 5-18cm long unarmed petiole which has margins fringed with fibres. The rachis of the leaf is 25-65cm long and has 16-28 pairs of pinnae (leaflets) arranged regularly down its length and inserted in a single plane per side of the leaf, a pair of pinnae thus forming a neat 'V
The inflorescence is branched to a single degree. The developing inflorescence is protected within a 20-33cm long spathe with an enlarged portion which is 10-18cm long and 1.4-3cm wide. The spathe is coloured green, has a woody consistency and the outer surface is covered in short, rusty-coloured, pubescent (downy) hairs that fall off easily and as the spathe matures. The inflorescence is finely coated in pale-coloured wax. The rachis of the inflorescence is only 1-4cm long, with 1-5 rachillae (branches) which are 6-15cm long. The flowers are coloured purple or purplish-yellow. The staminate (male) flowers are 9mm long; the pistillate (female), 7-8 by 7-8mm.
The ripe fruit are coloured greenish-purple, ovoid-shaped, 2-2.5cm long and 1.8-2.9cm wide. The flesh is yellow and sweet-sour. The nut within is hard, 1.5-1.8cm long and 1-1.2cm wide, and usually contains a single seed. The shape of the nut has been said to be ovoid or elliptic-shaped, or globose (round).
The plants look like a clump of grass.
In a dichotomous key to the genus provided in 2014, Noblick contrasts it to Butia marmorii, but the spathe in that species is papery, smooth or scaly, and the inflorescence has a much shorter peduncle and rachillae.
It grows in the same region as Butia eriospatha and B. microspadix.
It grows in sunny high altitude grassland, near a river, in sandy soils.
This species is extremely rare, the least known of the Brazilian Butia species, known only from a single locality and rarely grown in cultivation. It is so rare or little studied that in a 2017 study attempting to calculate population abundance it was deemed 'data deficient' (along with Butia witeckii, which has been collected in two localities).
/ref> In cultivation the leaves are bluish-green, and young leaves are very finely coated in a white wax.
Similar species
Distribution & habitat
Cultivation
Conservation
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