|                    Wild dilly
                      |  
              
                |                    Manilkara jaimiqui subsp. emarginata
                      |  
              
                |                    Sapotaceae 
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                 Landscape Uses:
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                 Specimen tree or shrub in the Florida Keys.  Buffer plantings. | 
               
                Ecological Restoration Notes:  | 
               
              
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                 A fairly common element of the upland side of the ecotone between tidal swamps and rockland hammocks in the Florida Keys.  Rare elsewhere. | 
               
              
                | Availability: | 
               
              
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                 Available at native plant nurseries in South Florida. Available in Key West at Key West Botanical Garden | 
               
              
                | Description: | 
               
              
                |   | 
                 Small to medium tree or large shrub with a dense rounded crown.  Trunks usually short, gnarled to 18 inches in diameter, but usually much less in South Florida.  Bark gray to reddish-brown, deeply fissured and breaking into small plates.  Leaves think, leathery, clustered toward the ends of the twigs. | 
               
              
                | Height: | 
               
              
                |   | 
                 Typically 10-15 feet in height; to 21 feet in South Florida.  Usually as broad as tall or broader. | 
               
              
                | Growth Rate: | 
               
              
                |   | 
                 Slow. | 
               
              
                | Range: | 
               
              
                |   | 
                 Monroe County Keys, Miami-Dade and Collier counties; Bahamas.  In Miami-Dade County, native to islands in and around Elliott Key in Biscayne National Park and the extreme southern mainland along the shores of Florida Bay in Everglades National Park; collected once in Collier County by J.R. Lorenz in what is now the Cape Romano - Ten Thousand Islands Aquatic Preserve. For a digitized image of Elbert Little's Florida range map, visit the  Exploring Florida website. | 
               
              
                | Habitats: | 
               
              
                |   | 
                 Coastal hammocks and pine rocklands. | 
               
              
                | Soils: | 
               
              
                |   | 
                 Moist to rarely inundated, well-drained to moderately well-drained limestone soils, with humusy top layer. | 
               
              
                | Nutritional Requirements: | 
               
              
                |   | 
                 Moderate; can grow in nutrient poor soils, but needs some organic content to thrive. | 
               
              
                | Salt Water Tolerance: | 
               
              
                |   | 
                 Moderate; tolerates brackish water or occasional inundation by salt water. | 
               
              
                | Salt Wind Tolerance: | 
               
              
                |   | 
                 Low; salt wind may burn the leaves. | 
               
              
                | Drought Tolerance: | 
               
              
                |   | 
                 Moderate; generally requires moist soils, but tolerant of short periods of drought once established. | 
               
              
                | Light Requirements: | 
               
              
                |   | 
                 Full sun. | 
               
              
                | Flower Color: | 
               
              
                |   | 
                 Yellowish. | 
               
              
                | Flower Characteristics: | 
               
              
                |   | 
                 Inconspicuous. | 
               
              
                | Flowering Season: | 
               
              
                |   | 
                 All year; peak spring-summer. | 
               
              
                | Fruit: | 
               
              
                |   | 
                 Light brown berry.  Edible. | 
               
              
                | Wildlife and Ecology: | 
               
              
                |   | 
                 Provides food and cover for wildlife. | 
               
                     
                | Horticultural Notes: | 
               
              
                |   | 
                 Can be grown from seed. | 
               
              
                | Comments: | 
               
              
                |   | 
                 Related to the commercially grown sapodilla (Manilkara zapota).  It is listed as threatened by the state of Florida. | 
               
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