Three species of
Bactris are native to the Greater Antilles—
B. jamaicana, which is endemic to Jamaica,
B. plumeriana which is endemic to Hispaniola, and
B. cubensis, which is endemic to Cuba. Virginia Salzman and
Walter Judd found that these three species formed a
clade—they are more closely related to one another than they are to other species within the genus.
History In the second volume of his book
A Voyage to the Islands Madera, Barbados, Nieves, S. Christophers and Jamaica (1725), Irish physician and naturalist
Hans Sloane includes a description of a species of palm he names
Prickly-Pole, which Salzman and Judd identified as
Bactris jamaicensis.
Olof Swartz included the species in
Cocos acicularis Sw. in 1788, but transferred it to
C. guineensis (L.) Sw. in 1791 In his 1864
Flora of the British West Indies,
August Grisebach lumped all Greater Antillean
Bactris species into
B. plumeriana.
Odoardo Beccari maintained this classification in his 1912 work,
The palms indigenous to Cuba.
Max Burret had more specimens to work with, thanks to the collections of
Erik Ekman and others in Cuba and Hispaniola, and was able to determine that plants from Cuba belonged to a separate species which he named
B. cubensis.
Liberty Hyde Bailey's collections from Jamaica allowed him to separate Jamaican plants into a new species which he named
B. jamaicana in 1938. == Distribution ==