This tree is only known from a single specimen and a few seedlings in the cloud forests on Cerro de Punta and Monte Jayuya, both at Toro Negro State Forest in Puerto Rico.
U.S. state | Georgia (U.S. state) | São Paulo (state) | Secretary of State | Washington (U.S. state) | state | United States Department of State | Moscow State University | United States Secretary of State | Ohio State University | Michigan State University | Black Forest | New York State Assembly | State Senator | New York State Senate | Rio de Janeiro (state) | Louisiana State Legislature | Iowa State University | Pennsylvania State University | Louisiana State University | Santa Catarina (state) | Florida State University | Paraná (state) | Vienna State Opera | Oregon State University | California State Assembly | Arizona State University | University at Buffalo, The State University of New York | forest | Wayne State University |
It is endemic to Puerto Rico, where it is known from only two localities: at the headwaters of Río Inabón and at the Toro Negro State Forest.