These palms are canopy
trees growing to 20–35 m tall.
I. deltoidea is easily recognized by the prominent bulge in the center of its trunk, and the
stilt roots, which form a dense cone up to 1 m in diameter at the base. It can thus be easily be distinguished from
Socratea exorrhiza (which also bears stilt roots), as the stilt roots of the former are much less tightly appressed upon one another. The
leaves are up to 5 m long, and pinnate. The numerous
pinnae are fan-shaped, and held in various planes. Each leaflet is up to 1 m long and 25 cm at the widest point. The
fruit is a 2 cm diameter
drupe, and primarily dispersed by
bats and
toucans. Toucan foraging behavior can have quite distinct signature in young second-growth forest regeneration. In certain cases seedlings growing around a mature fruiting
Iriartea palms may actually come from dozens of different trees hundreds of meters away.{{cite journal|last=Sezen|first=U.U.|date=2009|title=Proximity is not a proxy for parentage in an animal-dispersed Neotropical canopy palm ==Uses==