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The Macaw palm (Aiphanes minima) belongs to Arecaceae (the Palm family). It is a semi-tall evergreen tree that is native to Ispaniola to Puerto Rico, St. Lucia, Barbados, and Trinidad in the West Indies. It grows in tropical rainforests and hillsides and grows 5 to 8 m tall. It is single-stemmed, and the young stems are covered with a ring of black thorns. It has 10 to 20 pinnate compound leaves, each with 18 to 34 leaflet pairs. The lower and upper surfaces of the leaves are lined with spines about 1 cm long along the central rib, and the petiole often has black spines up to 6 cm long. The long scape produces an inflorescence with whitish yellow flowers. The fruits are round, red, ripe, and edible.
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