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Wandering Wood: The Transoceanic Pollination of the Double Coconut

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Nature

1 January 2026

In 2011, pollen from coco-de-mer trees in Singapore successfully fertilised female plants of this rare endangered species in Hawaii, thanks to the efforts of resourceful, determined botanists.

A Seychellois boy at Vallée de Mai, Praslin, Seychelles, early 1970s. The fruit of the double coconut has two lobes and loosely resembles a woman’s pelvis. The male flowers are borne on sausage-like stalks that can grow up to 2 m long. Photo by Dino Sassi - Marcel Fayon, Photo Eden Ltd. From Wikimedia Commons.

A Seychellois boy at Vallée de Mai, Praslin, Seychelles, early 1970s. The fruit of the double coconut has two lobes and loosely resembles a woman’s pelvis. The male flowers are borne on sausage-like stalks that can grow up to 2 m long. Photo by Dino Sassi - Marcel Fayon, Photo Eden Ltd. From Wikimedia Commons.

One of the female double coconut palms at the Foster Botanical Gardens in Honolulu, 21 September 2024. Fruits on the tree indicate that this individual was successfully pollinated. Photo by Choo Ruizhi.

One of the female double coconut palms at the Foster Botanical Gardens in Honolulu, 21 September 2024. Fruits on the tree indicate that this individual was successfully pollinated. Photo by Choo Ruizhi.

The fruit of the double coconut has two distinct lobes, 2010. Photo by Brocken Inaglory. From Wikimedia Commons.

The fruit of the double coconut has two distinct lobes, 2010. Photo by Brocken Inaglory. From Wikimedia Commons.

Geographical Distribution and Characteristics

The double coconut is endemic to Praslin and Curieuse in the Seychelles archipelago. In 2011, pollen from male plants in Singapore successfully fertilised female plants in Honolulu.

The double coconut is endemic to Praslin and Curieuse in the Seychelles archipelago. In 2011, pollen from male plants in Singapore successfully fertilised female plants in Honolulu.

The Allure of the Nuts

A woman holding a double coconut and a sausage-like stalk of male flowers at Vallée de Mai, Praslin, Seychelles, early 1970s. Photo by Dino Sassi - Marcel Fayon, Photo Eden Ltd. From Wikimedia Commons.

A woman holding a double coconut and a sausage-like stalk of male flowers at Vallée de Mai, Praslin, Seychelles, early 1970s. Photo by Dino Sassi - Marcel Fayon, Photo Eden Ltd. From Wikimedia Commons.

A young female double coconut palm at the Singapore Botanic Gardens, 9 January 2025. Photo by Choo Ruizhi.

A young female double coconut palm at the Singapore Botanic Gardens, 9 January 2025. Photo by Choo Ruizhi.

Conserving Unruly Giants

Valley of the coco-de-mer on Praslin, Seychelles, 1908. Image reproduced from Michael John Nicoll, Three Voyages of a Naturalist: Being an Account of Many Little-Known Islands in Three Oceans Visited by the 'Valhalla' R.Y.S. (London, England: Whitherby & Co., 1908), facing p. 130. Freshwater and Marine Image Bank, University Libraries, University of Washington.

Valley of the coco-de-mer on Praslin, Seychelles, 1908. Image reproduced from Michael John Nicoll, Three Voyages of a Naturalist: Being an Account of Many Little-Known Islands in Three Oceans Visited by the 'Valhalla' R.Y.S. (London, England: Whitherby & Co., 1908), facing p. 130. Freshwater and Marine Image Bank, University Libraries, University of Washington.

Wandering Wood

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