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- Fouquieria splendens - Wikipedia
Fouquieria splendens, commonly known as ocotillo, [a] is a plant indigenous to the Mojave, Sonoran, Chihuahuan and Colorado deserts in the Southwestern United States (southern California, southern Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas), and northern Mexico (as far south as Hidalgo and Guerrero) [3][4]
- Ocotillo - US Forest Service
What are those plants on desert hillsides that look like bunches of spiny crooked dead sticks? They are ocotillos (pronounced oh-koh-TEE-yohs), one of the most curious and unique plants of the southwestern United States Despite their funny looks, ocotillos are common and adaptable desert plants
- Plant Fact Sheet: Ocotillo - Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum
Ocotillo (Fouquieria splendens) are one of easiest plants to identify in the desert They are a large shrub with long cane-like unbranched spiny stems that grow from a short trunk
- Ocotillo | Description, Distribution, Facts | Britannica
ocotillo, (Fouquieria splendens), flowering spiny shrub (family Fouquieriaceae) characteristic of rocky deserts from western Texas to southern California and southward into Mexico
- Ocotillo: Native Shrub for Pollinators
Fouquieria splendens, the Ocotillo, is one of the most architecturally dramatic and ecologically important plants of the Sonoran and Chihuahuan Deserts
- Ocotillo - Joshua Tree National Park (U. S. National Park Service)
In the wide-open desert valleys of Joshua Tree National Park; specifically in the lower, warmer Colorado Desert, you will spot tall, spiny green branches reaching skyward These are Ocotillos (Fouquieria splendens), one of the more distinctive and adaptive plants in the park Though they may look like cactus, Ocotillos are not cacti at all
- Ocotillo: Unique Desert Survivor | Southwest Gardener
Ocotillo (Fouquieria splendens) is a spectacular accent plant native to three American Southwest deserts This unique plant is hard to categorize — I’ve heard it called a shrub, a succulent, and a semi-succulent
- Ocotillo | Desert Mountain, AZ
Ocotillo Scientific Name: Fouquieria splendens Common Name: Ocotillo Family: Fouquieriaceae, Ocotillo Family Duration:Perennial Size: Up to 20 feet or more Growth Form: Tree shrub; erect, woody, thorny with sharp spines, multiple unbranched stems originating at base, stems described as "whip-like"
- Plant Profiles: Ocotillo - Southeastern Arizona Bird Observatory
Plant Profiles: Ocotillo Scientific Name: Fouquieria splendens Alternate Common Names: Candlewood, Coachwhip, Devil’s Walking Stick, Albarda, Ocotillo de Corral Family: Fouquieriaceae Native Range: western Texas and southern New Mexico west to extreme southeastern California and extreme southern Nevada south to central Mexico
- Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center - The University of Texas at Austin
The name Ocotillo means "little pine" in Mexican Spanish, a reference to the fact that, like a pine (ocote), its stalks produce a resin used by humans for various purposes
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