The Saw Palmetto: Shady Safety to Florida’s Critters

The visage of the palm fronds conjures images of balmy tropics and sunny beaches, which is quite attractive given the recent subfreezing temperatures up north. The thatched roofs of seaside cabanas gently rustle in the breeze with a sound unique to the leaves of this plant.

Depending on the species of the tree, the trunks can be smooth or jagged. All have a coarse fibrous texture with the odd strings hanging loose from the trunk or fronds while providing shade and swaying in the occasional gust.

One species producing the long green finger-like foliage barely leaves the ground and offers shade for no creature much over a dozen inches tall in the panhandle. The saw palmetto, Serenoa repens, is a shrubby palm species native to Florida and common throughout the state in undeveloped and natural areas.

Saw palmettos are at home in the filtered light of the local pine and hardwood forests. In only a few years this plant can produce a dense thicket covering the forest floor.

This species was named after Sereno Watson, a 19th century American botanist of some fame. The globetrotting scientist worked mostly in the tropics of the western hemisphere before becoming a curator of the botanical collection at Harvard University.

His namesake species is typically two to eight feet tall. They emerge from subterranean or low growing stems and each plant is capable of producing thickets up to 18 feet in diameter.

The palmate leaves of the saw palmetto extend between two and three feet in diameter and are located at the end of a sharply saw-toothed stem. The well defended stems are approximately two feet long and the basis for the common name.

While they will grow in the full sun, this plant flourishes in the filtered light of pine and hardwood forests. Their dense growth tends to push out competing plants, forming massive and impenetrable barriers with the ground obscured from sight.

Beneath the palmetto foliage in its heavy shade is an unseen habitat where many creatures thrive. The stealth environment provides close quarter protection for a variety of mammals, reptiles and insects which remain hidden from predators. 

This plant flowers in north Florida between March and April on stalks which are approximately 20 inches long. The blooms are attractive to European honeybees and many native pollinators, being a good source of nectar and pollen.

The saw palmetto’s flowers produce generous amounts of round fruit or berries called “drupes” which are half an inch in diameter and ripen from September to October. This fruit creates an important seasonal supply of nourishment to a wide variety of bird and mammal species.

Undigested seeds which are dropped in hospitable locations germinate plants in the spring. In a few years new thickets of saw palmettos can become established.

An assortment of health benefits for humans has been attributed to saw palmetto drupes over the centuries. Most date back before the days of Spanish exploration and conquest.

In recent years medical science has been able to verify some of the presumptive claims, and organized harvesting has ensued.  The harvester must endure the late summer and early autumn high temperatures and humidity, and the chance encounter with one of the unpleasant residents entwined beneath these palmettos.

Even with the challenges of utilizing this native plant, its presence is a reminder of life without the complications of ice and snow.

About the author
Les Harrison

Les Harrison is a longtime resident of north Florida, having attended public schools in three counties. He has a Bachelor Degree from the University of Florida in Journalism and a Master’s of Science from Auburn University in Agricultural Economics. He is the author of more than 2000 newspaper and magazine stories and journal articles. During his career, he held positions in private, government and educational (university level) sectors. He holds the title of Extension Agent Emeritus. He can be reached at harrison.gl@gmail.com.

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