bn:00022447n
Noun Concept
Categories: Zamia, Extinct animals of Haiti, Flora of the Bahamas, Near threatened plants, Flora of Cuba
EN
coontie  Florida arrowroot  Seminole bread  Zamia pumila  Zamia integrifolia
EN
Small tough woody zamia of Florida and West Indies and Cuba; roots and half-buried stems yield an arrowroot WordNet 3.0
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EN
Small tough woody zamia of Florida and West Indies and Cuba; roots and half-buried stems yield an arrowroot WordNet 3.0 & Open English WordNet
Zamia pumila, commonly known as guáyara in Spanish, is a small, tough, woody cycad native to the Greater Antilles. Wikipedia
Florida arrowroot was the commercial name of an edible starch extracted from Zamia integrifolia, a small cycad native to North America. Wikipedia
Zamia integrifolia is a small, tough, woody cycad native to the southeast United States, the Bahamas, Cuba, Grand Cayman and possibly extinct in Puerto Rico and Haiti. Wikipedia
Zamia integrifolia, also known as coontie palm is a small, tough, woody cycad native to the southeastern United States, the Bahamas, Cuba, and the Cayman Islands. Wikipedia
A commercial starch derived from Zamia pumila, harvested from the wild in Florida Wikipedia Disambiguation
Edible starch Wikidata
Zamia integrifolia (syn. Zamia floridana), cycadaceous plants of Florida and the West Indies, or the starch (sago) produced from these plants. Wiktionary
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