- Source: Cylindropuntia ramosissima
Cylindropuntia ramosissima is a species of cactus known by the common names diamond cholla and branched pencil cholla.
Distribution
Cylindropuntia ramosissima is native to the Mojave and Sonoran Deserts of the Southwestern United States, California, and Northwestern Mexico, and to Baja California and its Islas San Benito.
Description
Cylindropuntia ramosissima is a decumbent or erect and treelike cactus which can approach 2 meters-6 feet in maximum height. It has many narrow branches made up of cylindrical segments, green in color drying gray, the surface divided into squarish, flat tubercles with few or no spines, or often with a single long, straight spine.
The flower is small and orange, pink or brownish in color. The fruit is a small, dry, spiny body up to 2 centimeters long.
Cylindropuntia ramosissima is a host to several species of moths, most notably the Sphinx Moth.
External links
Cylindropuntia ramosissima photo gallery at Cholla Web
Jepson Manual Treatment: Cylindropuntia ramosissima
Flora of North America: Cylindropuntia ramosissima
Cylindropuntia ramosissima Photo gallery
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Cylindropuntia ramosissima
- Cylindropuntia
- C. ramosissima
- Opuntioideae
- List of least concern plants
- List of flora of the Sonoran Desert Region by common name
- List of flora of the Mojave Desert region
- Islas San Benito
- Granite Mountains (northern San Bernardino County, California)
- List of descriptive plant species epithets (I–Z)