COOK AND COLLINS—ECONOMIC PLANTS OF PORTO RICO, 211 
Palo santo. See Palo punz. 
A wild tree 30 feet (9 meters) or morein height. with a trunk 8 to 12 inches (20 
to 30 centimeters) in diameter. Furnishes a soft ash-colored wood that breaks 
with a vertical fracture. Used in building houses and fences. (Grosourdy, 
2: 407.) 
Captain Hansard gives 0.70 as the specific gravity of this wood. 
Pana. See Gilibertia arborea, 
Pana cimarrona. See Didymopanae morototoni, 
Panales. 
Small froth-like rolls made of sugar and white of egg. They are not for eating, 
but are dissolved in water to make a sweetish drink, 
Panicum maximum. GUINEA GRASS. YERBA DE GUINEA. 
The guinea grass is said to have been used as bedding in the slave ships, and to 
have become established in tropical America accidentally after floating ashore 
from the rubbish thrown overboard when the ships were unloaded. The origin 
of this account should be traced as a note on plant introduction. 
Panicum molle. Para Grass. MALOJILLO. PLATE XLIX. 
As a pasture grass this species is second only to the Guinea or ‘‘ yerba de 
Guinea.”” It is grown in the swampy meadows of the north coast and wherever 
the ground is too moist for the latter species, 
The Malojillo is deep green in color, decumbent at base, with very hairy joints. 
The flower stalk has fewer and shorter branches than the Guinea grass. Both 
species produce luxuriant crops, but both seem too coarse to represent the food 
value of the same amount of the temperate grasses. 
Papa. See Solanum tuberosum. 
Papaw. See Caricu pupaya. 
Papaya. See Carica papaya. 
This is a cultivated fruit, not a mountain forest tree as stated by Hill. 
Papaya lechosa. See Carica papaya. 
Para grass. See Paniciun molle. 
Paralejo velludo. See Heteropteris laurifolia. 
Parasita. See Dendropremon bicolor. 
Parathesis crenulata. See Seca-gargauta, 
Family Myrsinaceae; an erect shrub, | to 2 meters high, on the sides of ravines. 
Bello gives the common name “rasca garganta.”’ (Stahl, 6: 37, as Ardisia 
crenulata, ) 
Parcha. See Pussiflora laurifolia. 
Parcha augosta. See Passiflora suberosa, 
Parcha cimarrona. See Pussiflora maliformis. 
Parcha colorada. See Passiflora rubra. 
Parcha de garjos. See Passiflora serrata. 
Parcha multiflora. See Passiflora multiflora. 
Parcha ojillosa. See Passiflora fulae. 
Parcha palida. See Passiflora suberosa. 
Parcha pelitiesa. See Passiflora suberosa, 
Parcha yedra. See Pussiflora suberosa, 
Paritium elatum. See Hibiscus clatus. 
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