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Strehlow records show Aboriginal legend of the seeds being brought to Palm Valley
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{{taxobox
{{taxobox
| image = Livistona mariae.jpg
| image = Livistona mariae.jpg
| status = LR/cd
| status = LC
| status_system = IUCN2.3
| status_system = IUCN2.3
| regnum = [[Plantae]]
| regnum = [[Plantae]]

Revision as of 00:58, 18 July 2015

Livistona mariae
Scientific classification
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L. mariae
Binomial name
Livistona mariae

Livistona mariae, commonly called central Australian cabbage palm or red cabbage palm, is a species of flowering plant in the Arecaceae family.

It is found only in Australia with the best-known occurrence found in Palm Valley in Finke Gorge National Park, Northern Territory. There are more than 3,000 cabbage palms in Palm Valley, many of which are several hundred years old and form a lush oasis among the rugged rocks and gorges. This region is now largely dry Central Ranges xeric scrubland.

The palms are not relics from a previous age when Central Australia was much wetter, as previously thought.

New genetic analyses find that Livistona mariae arrived only 15,000 years ago. The red cabbage palm's closest relative, the Mataranka palm Livistonia rigida, grows in two areas 800 to 1000 kilometers to the north on either side of the Gulf of Carpentaria—too far away, it would seem, for these species to be anything but distant relations.[1] However, a 2010 study led by Australian biologists, including Bowman, and colleagues at Kyoto University in Japan found that L. mariae was genetically identical to L. rigida.

Aboriginal legend recorded in 1894 by Carl Strehlow describes "gods from the north" bringing the seeds to Palm Valley, which concords with the more modern research.[2]

References

  1. ^ Ancient Palm Not So Ancient
  2. ^ "Research findings back up Aboriginal legend on origin of Central Australian palm trees". ABC News. 3 April 2015. Retrieved 5 April 2015.