California Avocado Society 1981 Yearbook - Volume 65:49-55
Exploring for "Aguacate
de Mico" in Central America
E. Schieber
Eugenio
Schieber
Plant Pathologist, Antigua, Guatemala
G.
A. Zentmyer
Professor
Emeritus,
Department of Plant
Pathology, University of California,
Riverside
During the explorations
made in recent years of Persea species
under the University of California (Riverside) program, we have
encountered an interesting collection known as
"Aguacate de Mico." Botanists who have explored the region
of Central America overlooked this interesting wild avocado.
The first scientist to
detect an avocado of this kind, meaning in English "Monkey
Avocado," in all the countries explored was G. A. Zentmyer. He found
"Aguacamico," as it is known in El Salvador, near the edge of the crater
of "El Boqueron" volcano in Central El Salvador, in the early 1950's.
He then found it in the 1970's in the region of Sta. Maria de Ostuma in Nicaragua, continuing
his interest in this wild true avocado. Since then, our explorations made during the last decade have also included
searching for additional specimens
of "Aguacate de Mico." What may be a special type of "Aguacate
de Mico" (with anise scent) was reported in 1935 by Wilson Popenoe; he called it "Aguacate de Anis"
of San Isidro (1).
Distribution in Central
America
Since its first detection
in El Salvador in Central America, we have found populations of
"Aguacate de Mico" from the Guatemala-Mexico border south to the volcano
Turrialba in Costa Rica. It is found in the warmer regions of the volcanic chain of Central America. Forests located
between 2,500 and 4,000 feet above
sea level constitute the ecological zone for the wild avocado in all of the countries where it is found.
The following centers or
populations of trees of "Aguacate de Mico" have
been detected in recent years:
1. Guatemala
(a)
El Tumbador, San Marcos, near the
Guatemala-Mexico border, in a coffee region.
(b)
Colomba, Quetzaltenango, near coffee
plantations.
(c)
Between Santiago Atitlan and Chicacao
(cardamom farms).
(d)
San Lucas Toliman, growing wild along the ridge of an extensive canyon.
(e)
Slopes of volcano Quetzaltepeque (in warm
region about 2,500 feet above sea level).
(f)
Between the crater of the Quetzaltepeque
volcano and the old road to Esquipulas (near Honduras-Guatemala
border).
2. El
Salvador
(a)
Slopes of the volcano "El Boqueron"
where Zentmyer detected it for the first time in the early 1950's.
(b)
Northern slopes of the volcano San Salvador,
detected with Dr. Benjamin Waite, then of AID in El Salvador.
(c)
"Los Andes" on the slopes of volcano
Sta. Ana in western El Salvador; one of the largest populations
found in recent years.
3. Honduras
(a) Near Santa Rosa de Copan near the
Guatemala-Honduras border, detected recently this year by
Schieber.
4. Nicaragua
(a) In Santa Maria de Ostuma near
Matagalpa, detected there for the first time by Zentmyer in
the 1970's.
5. Costa Rica
(a) Slopes of the volcano
"Turrialba."
Fig. 1. G. A. Zentmyer
with inflorescence of Aguacate de Mico. Photographed in Los Andes, Santa Ana volcano
in El Salvador.


Fig. 2.
Leaf of Aguacate de Mico showing its characteristic shape and venation.

Fig.
3. Tree of Aguacate de Mico photographed in
Santa Ana volcano in El Salvador.
Characters of the
"Aguacate de Mico"
In all the regions where "Aguacate
de Mico" has been detected, one of the primary characters is
the very hard-shelled fruit, resembling the primitive variants of the
"Guatemalan criollos." These hard-shelled fruits remain
hard even when the fruit is ripe. Usually the fruit is round to oblate and with
irregular skin dark green in color. The seed is oblate. The foliage of the tree is similar
to the Guatemalan criollos; however, the foliage is very dull, not shiny.
Individual leaves are dull with no luster. The trunks from a distance have a more whitish appearance than the Guatemalan criollo
trees. The branching usually starts high on the trunk, and seldom are branches seen on the lower part of the trunk.
.

Fig. 4.
Fruit of Aguacate de Mico photographed in
Santa Maria de Ostuma in Matagalpa
region in Nicaragua

Fig. 5.
Locations for collections of Aguacate
de Mico in Central America.
Variants within
"Aguacate de Mico"
We have detected during our explorations,
"variants" within what we classify
as "Aguacate de Mico." For example, even within a country, the Aguacate
de Mico has smaller fruit in Los Andes, Santa Ana than in El Boqueron, also in the Republic of El Salvador.
Importance
of this wild avocado
We believe that "Aguacate de Mico"
played an important part in the evolution of
the "Guatemalan criollos." The fruit characters are quite similar, although there is generally less flesh in
fruit of "Aguacate de Mico"
and fruit are smaller than the average Guatemalan criollo. Monkeys and
squirrels eat this avocado in Central America; the natives do not eat it because of its bitter taste.
It is of interest, that
being so conspicuous and known by "campesinos" throughout
Central America, this wild avocado was overlooked by botanists
exploring for Persea in this
region of the world.
Literature Cited:
1.
Popenoe, W. 1935. Origin of the cultivated
races of avocado. California Avocado Association Yearbook 1935:
184-194.
2.
Schieber, E. and G. A. Zentmyer. 1973.
Collecting Perseas in Central
America and Mexico. California Avocado Society Yearbook 56: 94-101.
3.
Schieber, E. and G. A. Zentmyer. 1975.
Collecting Persea in the
Republic of El Salvador. California Avocado Society Yearbook
58: 83-88.
4.
Zentmyer, G. A. and E. Schieber. 1976.
Exploring for Persea in Costa
Rica. California
Avocado Society Yearbook 60: 172-175.