Summary[edit] Description: Español: Cavanillesia platanifolia de 45 mts, tomada en la región de Urabá, Antioquia, Colombia. Date: 20 May 2011. Source: Own work. Author: EntBotanik. Other versions: sin versiones.
The base of a giant tree species which ranges from Nicaragua to Peru under names such as Cuipo, Pijio and Macondo. Photo from Barro Colorado Island, Panama.
Cuipo trees rising above the Chucunaque River in the Darien of Panama. They need thick trunks, as they have the softest known wood. These are called Macondo in Colombia, name source for the magic-realist village, central to Gabriel Garcia's book 'Hundred Years of Solitude'.
Summary[edit] Description: Darien, along the Chucunaque River Cavanillesia platanifolia Cuipo trees. Date: 5 September 2016, 20:51. Source: 2.cuipo2. Author: Dick Culbert from Gibsons, B.C., Canada.
Summary[edit] Description: English: C. platanifolia at Flamingo Tropical Garden in Davie, Florida, USA Bark shows graffiti. Date: 12 October 2021, 11:11:01. Source: Own work. Author: KATHERINE WAGNER-REISS.
Summary[edit] Description: English: C. platanifolia at Flamingo Tropical Garden in Davie, Florida, USA. Date: 12 October 2021, 11:10:20. Source: Own work. Author: KATHERINE WAGNER-REISS.
Dick Culbert|sourceurl=https://flickr.com/photos/92252798@N07/28910753773%7Carchive=https://web.archive.org/web/20200421062845/https://flickr.com/photos/92252798@N07/28910753773%7Creviewdate=2017-10-31 14:12:45|reviewlicense=cc-by-2.0|reviewer=FlickreviewR 2
Wikimedia Commons
Summary[edit] Description: The exposed roots of the Cuipo Tree ooze an edible sap in the Darien of Panama. Date: 14 May 2014, 01:40. Source: Cavanillesia platanifolia. Author: Dick Culbert from Gibsons, B.C., Canada.