Sumario: | The most likely sites for the introduction of the coconut to the Atlantic seaboard are the island of Saniago, in the Cape Verde group, or the island of Gorée, to the southeast of the Cape Verde peninsula. The earliest possible date for an introduction was 1499 and the probable source of seed was Mozambique. Later introductions could have been made to the same sites from the same source. Within 50 years, by 1549, one or both of these locations became a centre for dissemination to other parts of the Western Hemisphere (except the Pacific coast). The result is that coconut populations now considered endemic to the Atlantic coasts of Africa, America and around the Caribbean are basically the same as coconuts in East Africa, India and Sri Lanka. Epidemic lethal diseases in parts of the Caribbean and West Africa could continue to spread to all of these territories because these coconut populations are completely susceptible.
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