According to the World Biodiversity Ranking, Colombia ranks third in the number of palm species (Arecaceae Family). The Andean region presents the richest flora of the palms in the country, with 43% of the total species of Colombia. Among all the palm species found in Colombia, the Wax Palm is the most special. Here I will tell you why.
Palm trees have been linked to the life of man and his feelings since immemorial times, principally because of their graceful appearance and the innumerable benefits they bring.
For this reason, the term palm is not only applied to palms but also has a connotation of triumph, victory, and applause; it is also used as a title of honor for the great ones of a kingdom.
Colombia is one of the richest countries in the world in terms of palms, with 289 species, 47 of which are endemic.
The Wax Palm (Ceroxylon quindiuense): Colombia’s Tallest Tree

The first news about the existence of wax palms is due to José Celestino Mutis. It was found by him in the Andean Mountains, in the passage between Quindío and Tolima departments.
He found them distributed between 2400 and 2900 meters (7930 – 9700 ft) above sea level , within cloud forests composed mainly of native pine trees (Podocarpus) and oaks (Quercus granatensis). The species was validated by a description published in 1808.
Other remarkable explorers and naturalists, Alexander Von Humboldt and Aimé Jacques Alexandre Bonpland, re-discovered the wax palm in 1801, and just like Mutis, they were also fascinated by this plant. Humboldt described the spectacle as one of the most moving of all his journeys:
“The forest upon the forest, where tall, slender palms penetrate the leafy veil that surrounds them”.
Alexander Von Humboldt

William Purdie, a Scottish Botanist from that time, also described the characteristics and features of our national tree in these terms:
“The haughty, noble trunk of this tree is covered with a layer of resinous wax, which gives it a whitish marble appearance, providing a lively distinctive feature to the very peculiar scenery of the Quindio moor, where the palm abounds in extraordinary degree without causing any damage to the subordinate forest under its pleasant shade.
To obtain the wax the tree is felled and I was informed by my guides that each tree provides up to 25 pounds… The wax is used mixed with tallow to make candles… to offer to the saints and the Virgin… it is in considerable demand but is abundant and easy to obtain”.
William Purdie
These chronicles and descriptions show the importance of the wax palm since ancient times. Some historians even claim that it was used by indigenous people for the extraction of gold.
Fascinating Wax Palm Facts

- Its stem is covered by a layer of wax that can be used to make candles.
- It can live up to 200 years.
- A seedling takes around 50 years to reach the adult phase.
- The wax palm can reach 70 meters in height.
- It lives in an uncommon habitat for palms, above 3000 meters above sea level, with low temperatures that are unusual for a palm to resist.
- The seedling is shadow dependent, so fragmentation and deforestation are killing these palm populations.
- Each wax palm can produce about 24,000 fruits per year.
- Each palm can produce up to nine bunches simultaneously, each with 4,000 fruits or more.
- Despite the number of seeds and seedling a wax palm produces, less than 8% survive at the end.
- In the wax palms, there are females and males, as in humans. This implies that for its reproduction the palm needs some mechanism to carry the pollen from the males to the females.
- Wax palm pollination is carried out by several species of tiny beetles of the genus Mystrops.
- Pollinators, in turn, depend on the wax palm for their survival, since the adults feed exclusively on its pollen and the females lay their eggs in the small flowers of the palm, where the larvae that are born feed on the tissue of the petals.
- The wax palm attracts its small pollinating beetles by the aroma of its flowers, which have volatile chemical compounds specially designed to conquer them. It is a system as precise as a key in its lock.
- A well-conserved population of palms can produce more than two billion mature fruits each year, which represents an extraordinary source of food for the fauna.
- It is home and refuge of the Yellow-eared Parrot (Ognorhynchus icterotis).
- It is an ‘umbrella species’ since its conservation is key to the survival of many others, or of entire ecosystems.
- Each stem ring represents a year of growth.
Colombia’s National Tree
The Wax Palm was proposed by the colombian botanist Armando Dugand as the national tree of Colombia. He was the director of the Institute of Natural Sciences of the National University of Colombia and a recognized specialist in palms. In July of 1949, Dugand proposed it as such to the organizing committee of the Third South American Congress of Botany.

Dugand highlighted the wax palm as a true aesthetic heritage of Colombia and as its most typical plant, not only because it is an outstanding and characteristic element of the Andean landscape, but also because of the wax it produces and the extraordinary nature of its habitat, which goes far beyond the geographical and altitudinal limits common to the palm family.
He also described it as the most beautiful and most developed among the palms, since it can surpass 50 meters in height. Due to the characteristic of these plants to take a long time to decompose and take up to 200 years to complete its life cycle, they were thought to symbolize the capacity to persist and last.
Since then, the wax palm has been considered the national tree, and so it appears in many writings, minutes, documents, and postcards.


Additionally, in 1985, the Congress of the Republic of Colombia adopted the Quindío wax palm, C. quindiuense, as the national tree with the Law 61 of 1985. It is so valuable and so representative of our country that this law stipulates in its article 3:
“The felling of the wax palm is forbidden under a criminal sanction applicable in the form of a fine, convertible into an arrest, for the benefit of the municipality where the infraction has been committed”.
Law 61 of 1985
Scientific and Botanical Significance of the Wax Palm
Some historians affirm that in the 19th and 20th centuries, palms were planted around patriotic places as a sign of scientific and botanical values and to emphasize that Colombia is biodiverse. The preferred palm was always the Wax Palm.
In Bogotá, you can find wax palm gardens in places such as Universidad Externado de Colombia, the botanical garden of Bogotá José Celestino Mutis, the El Dorado Avenue (26th street) in Bogotá, which is a temple of the wax palm, and the Eje Ambiental in the center of the city.

All the important buildings that frame the El Dorado Avenue and the Eje Ambiental in Bogota have in their facilities, or very close to their facades, a wax palm. These are, on El Dorado Avenue: The National Administrative Center (CAN), the Military Forces, the National Registry Office, the Government of Cundinamarca, the Bogotá Police Hospital, the Bank of the Republic of Colombia, the National Health Institute, and RTVC-Public Media System. In the Eje Ambiental, the Colombian Academy of Language, the Icetex, the Icfes, and the monument of the Templete de Bolívar.

Is the Wax Palm Endangered?
Despite its cultural significance, the wax palm faces serious threats. The IUCN Red List classifies Ceroxylon quindiuense as Vulnerable (VU), with an estimated 19.8% population reduction over three generations (approximately 240 years, given its extraordinary lifespan). The species is threatened by habitat loss from agriculture and cattle ranching, traditional leaf harvesting for religious celebrations, and its own biology — the wax palm cannot tolerate temperatures above 20°C and is restricted to a narrow altitudinal band between 2,000 and 3,100 meters above sea level, making it particularly vulnerable to climate change.
Field studies have documented individual palms with ages estimated at 139 to 169 years, and researchers believe some specimens may exceed 200 years. This extreme longevity, combined with a maturation period of 80 to 100 years before a palm reaches reproductive age, means that populations lost today cannot be replaced for generations.

Recently, it is the cultivation of the Hass avocado that has endangered the survival of the Wax Palm. The situation is worrisome because the area declared as a Coffee Cultural Landscape by UNESCO is beginning to change due to the displacement of the traditional coffee cultivation by the Hass avocado.
This has also led to the endangerment of a species of bird endemic to the Colombian Andes, the Yellow-eared Parrot (Ognorhynchus icterotis).
Palm Sunday: A Tradition That Threatens Survival
One of the most paradoxical threats to the wax palm comes from religious tradition. For centuries, young wax palm leaves were harvested for Palm Sunday (Domingo de Ramos) celebrations across Colombia. Before the practice was restricted, an estimated 500,000 to several million leaves were harvested annually from wild populations. Since the wax palm produces only one new leaf per year, this harvesting severely impacted younger palms essential for population renewal.
The 1985 law (Law 61) that declared the wax palm as the national tree also prohibited its felling, and subsequent campaigns by the Catholic Church and environmental organizations have promoted alternatives — including leaves from commercially grown palms and other species. While compliance has improved significantly, the practice has not been entirely eliminated in rural areas.
The Yellow-Eared Parrot: An Inseparable Bond
The Yellow-eared Parrot (Ognorhynchus icterotis) depends almost entirely on the wax palm for survival. This endangered parrot — once feared extinct with fewer than 81 individuals recorded in 1999 — nests exclusively in the hollow trunks of dead or dying wax palms. The relationship is obligate: without mature wax palms, the parrot cannot reproduce.
Thanks to conservation efforts led by Fundación ProAves and local communities, the population has recovered to over 1,000 individuals. The recovery is considered one of Latin America’s greatest conservation success stories, but it remains entirely dependent on wax palm habitat protection. The parrots also feed on wax palm fruits, and their movements between palm populations help with seed dispersal — creating a mutually beneficial relationship where protecting one species directly benefits the other.

Tourism is one of the most promising conservation strategies for this species. On the other hand, rural communities prefer it over agriculture, livestock, and mining.
If you want to know where to go for visiting the most emblematic landscape of the Colombian Andes, read our entry The Unique Wax Palm Forests Destinations in Colombia.
If you want to schedule your visit to Colombia, plan your trip with us! Explore more of Colombia’s natural wonders: visit the stunning lakes of Colombia, discover Colombia’s national parks, or learn about birdwatching in Colombia.
References
- La palma de cera, árbol nacional. Autor: Díaz Piedrahita, Santiago. In Biblioteca Virtual/ Credencial Historia/ Número 139/ La Palma De Cera, Árbol Nacional.
- Nuestra parcera, la palma de cera. Por Sebastián Acosta Alzate. 2019. In Señal Colombia TV.
- La vida secreta de la palma de cera, el árbol nacional. By Rodrigo Bernal 2018. In El Tiempo.
- Palma de Cera en Riesgo de Extinción. In The New York Times.

Sara Colmenares holds a Doctor of Science (D.Sc.) in Ecology from the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro and a Master’s degree in Botany from the same institution. Her doctoral research focused on palm ecology in the Atlantic Forest, supported by the Rufford Foundation conservation grant.
A published researcher in the Brazilian Journal of Plant Physiology and a member of the Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation (ATBC), Sara has presented her work at international conferences across Latin America and beyond. She was awarded the COLCIENCIAS “Virginia Gutiérrez de Pineda” fellowship, one of Colombia’s most competitive academic distinctions for young researchers.
Sara founded the Sula nature tourism brand in 2018, applying her scientific expertise to develop birding and wildlife experiences across Colombia’s six natural regions. Her fieldwork took her from the cloud forests of the Andes to the Amazon basin, the Pacific coast, and the plains of the Orinoquía. She combined deep ecological knowledge with firsthand experience to create content that is both scientifically accurate and practically useful for nature travelers.
She holds a B.Sc. in Biology from the National University of Colombia, where she also taught plant ecophysiology. She speaks Spanish, Portuguese, and English.