Additional notes (click to expand)

Commemorative

Louis-Marie Aubert du Petit-Thouars (5 November 1758, Bournois – 12 May 1831, Paris) was an eminent French botanist known for his work collecting and describing orchids from the three islands of Madagascar, Mauritius and Réunion. Petit-Thouars came from an aristocratic family of the region of Anjou, where he grew up in the castle of Boumois, near Saumur. In 1792, after an imprisonment of two years during the French Revolution, he was exiled to Madagascar and the nearby islands such as La Réunion (then called Bourbon). He started collecting many plant specimens on Madagascar, Mauritius and La Réunion. Ten years later he was able to return to France with a collection of about 2000 plants. Most of his collection went to the Muséum de Paris, while some species ended up at Kew. He was elected member of the prestigious Académie des Sciences on 10 April 1820. Du Petit-Thouars is remembered as the author of the book “Histoire des végétaux recueillis dans les îles de France, de Bourbon et de Madagascar.” (usually abbreviated in botanic literature as Orch. Iles Afr), illustrated by many beautiful drawings. Other books followed : " Mélanges de botanique et de voyages " and " Histoire particulière des plantes orchidées recueillies dans les trois îles australes de France, de Bourbon et de Madagascar " ( L'île de France is the present island of Mauritius and L'île de Bourbon is the present La Réunion). He did pioneering botanical work by his descriptions of orchids from this region : 52 species from Mauritius and 55 from La Réunion.
wikipedia December 2013

Horticulture

E. Africa, coastal forest. Possibly oldest living species of Cycad. Light shade, hot and humid conditions. Very frost tender. A food plant.

Toxicity

Cycas micronesica, another Cycas, is linked with the human degenerative disease Lytico-Bodig disease, which is similar to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) through a neurotoxin (BMAA) in the seeds (due to symbiosis with cyanobacteria), which were a traditional food source on Guam until the 1960s.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cycas_micronesica

Geographical distribution

  • Africa, East Tropical Africa, Kenya
  • Africa, East Tropical Africa, Tanzania
  • Africa, South Tropical Africa, Mozambique
  • Africa, Western Indian Ocean, Comoros
  • Africa, Western Indian Ocean, Madagascar
  • Africa, Western Indian Ocean, Seychelles

Cycas thouarsii R.Br.

Family: CYCADACEAE
Genus: Cycas
Species: thouarsii R.Br.
Common names: Madagascar Cycad
Distribution summary: E. Africa
Conservation status (IUCN Red List): Least Concern
Habit: Cycad
Hardiness: H1c - Heated greenhouse; warm temperate
Garden status: Not currently grown


Back to List