Family: Rutaceae
Group: Dicot
Substrate:
Terrestrial
Habit:
Tree
Perennation:
Perennial
Native Range: South Florida, the Greater Antilles, southern Mexico, Central America and northwestern South America.
NatureServe Global Status:
Apparently Secure
Florida Natural Areas Inventory State Status:
Presumed Extirpated or Extinct
IRC SOUTH FLORIDA Status:
Presumed Extirpated or Extinct in the Wild
Map of select IRC data for peninsular Florida
SOUTH FLORIDA Occurrence:
Present
SOUTH FLORIDA Native Status:
Native
South Florida History and Distribution: Ranked as presumed extirpated in Rare Plants of South Florida (
Gann et al. 2002, pp 57-58), based on a collection in Miami by Abram P. Garber in 1877 and possibly a single tree in Matheson Hammock Park discovered in 1966, which was destroyed in the late 1970s or early 1980s. However, seeds were collected prior to the tree’s destruction and germplasm is maintained at Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden.
SOUTH FLORIDA Cultivated Status:
Cultivated
Comments: For more images and a description of plants in Cuba, visit the
Cybertruffle website. For a digitized image of Elbert Little's Florida range map, visit the
Exploring Florida website.
Distinguished from the common A. elemifera in having: leaflets often 5 and usually more than 5 cm long (versus usually 3 and less than 5 cm long); inflorescence downy hairy (versus glabrous); ovary hairy, stalked (versus glabrous, sessile); and fruit elongated, 9-14 mm long (versus rounded, 5-8 mm long) (from Tomlinson 1980).
FLORIDA KEYS Occurrence:
Recorded as Present in Error
Map of select IRC data for the Florida Keys
Florida Keys History and Distribution: Not reported for the Florida Keys by John Kunkel Small in 1913. Reported for the Monroe County Keys by the Atlas of Florida Vascular Plants, but we believe that a
FLAS specimen of
A. elemifera has been misdetermined (Gann et al., 2002).