- Source: Gossypium tomentosum
Gossypium tomentosum, commonly known as maʻo, huluhulu or Hawaiian cotton, is a species of cotton plant that is endemic to the Hawaiian Islands. It inhabits low shrublands at elevations from sea level to 120 m (390 ft). Maʻo is a shrub that reaches a height of 1.5–5 ft (0.46–1.52 m) and a diameter of 5–10 ft (1.5–3.0 m). The seed hairs (lint) are short and reddish brown, unsuitable for spinning or twisting into thread.
Genetic studies indicate that Hawaiian cotton is related to American species of Gossypium, with its closest relative Gossypium hirsutum. Its ancestor may have come to the islands from the Americas as a seed on the wind or in the droppings of a bird, or as part of floating debris.
Native Hawaiians use maʻo flowers to make a yellow dye.
References
External links
Media related to Gossypium tomentosum at Wikimedia Commons
Data related to Gossypium tomentosum at Wikispecies
Gossypium tomentosum (ma'o) information from the Hawaiian Ecosystems at Risk project (HEAR)
Gossypium tomentosum (ma'o) images from Forest & Kim Starr
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Tanaman kapas
- Gossypium tomentosum
- Gossypium
- Kaena Point
- Leaf
- Bt cotton
- Tropical Gardens of Maui
- Endemism in the Hawaiian Islands
- Bucculatrix thurberiella
- Glossary of botanical terms
- ʻĀhihi-Kīnaʻu Natural Area Reserve