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Plant List 4 (8 plants this week) Golden Poppy (Eschscholtzia mexicana) • Poppy family = Four petals, a lot of pollenmaking stamen & many ovaries • Yellow-orange flower and long fruit • Leaves are only slightly bigger than the main veins Spiderling (Boehaavia coccinea) • Four O’Clock Family = 5-lobed flowers in clusters • Sticky unevenly heart-shaped leaves in pairs • Sticky burrs are the fruit • Sprawling on ground Manzanita (Arctostaphylos pungens) • Heather Family (woody, 5-petals, blueberry is part of this family) • Bush with reddish bark on younger branches • Stiff tear-drop shaped leaves with pointed tip • Whitish urn-shaped flowers, dark berries Madrone (Arbutus arizonica) • Heather Family (woody, 5-petals, blueberry is part of this family) • Large tree with reddish bark/new branches • Long leathery leaves (3-6”), dark green, sometime with teeth on the edge • Urn-shaped flowers & reddish berries Desert Globemallow (Sphaeralcea ambigua) • Mallow Family (see next section) • Orange flowers with 5 petals and a fused tube of pollen-making stamen, about 1” across • Large triangular leaves with wavy edges and covered with silver hairs Other Mallow spp. • Mallow Family = All mallow flowers – 5 petals (distinct), and 5 sepals (green part below the flower – Many pollen-making stamen fused into a tube – Tip of the female part of the flower sticks up through the tube – Fruit is a dry, sectioned circle Hackberry (Celtis pallida) • Elm Family • Thick bush with thin veins and small, ovalshaped leaves (less than 1.5”) – May have a few teeth, may not • Branches zig-zag, thorns • Tasty orange berries Cottonwood, Fremont (Populus fremontii) • Willow Family = woody (droopy) trees • Toothed leaves almost as wide at the base as they are long (like an equilateral triangle) • Tall with pale brown bark • White, fuzzy fruit on female tree Plant List 4 • • • • • • • • Gold Poppy (Eschscholtzia mexicana) Spiderling (Boehaavia coccinea) Madrone (Arbutus arizonica) Manzanita (Arctostaphylos pungens) Desert Globemallow (Sphaeralcea ambigua) Other Mallow spp. Hackberry (Celtis pallida) Cottonwood, Fremont (Populus fremontii) Plant List 5 (7 plants this week) Rattlesnake Weed (Euphorbia albomarginata) • (Euphorbia family) • Small, ground cover plant • Four small white petals, purple inner portion to the petal • Poisonous weed with milky sap Limber Bush (Jatropha cardiophylla) • (Euphorbia family) • Flexible reddish stick, usually leafless – “Sangre de Cristo” – “Dragon’s Blood” • Heart-shaped leaves during rainy season – “Heart-Leafed Limberbush” Jojoba (Simmondsia chinensis) • (Euphorbia/Spurge family) • Blue-green oval leathery leaves, often in pairs & vertical • Male: small, yellow pollen flowers w/o petals • Female: make dark oily “nut” London Rocket* (Sisymbrium irio) • Mustard family – 4 petals in a “cross” shape, seed pod with two layers • Leaves with jagged edges from plant base • Tiny yellow flowers on tip of long seed stalk • Long seed pods Shepherd’s Purse* (Capsella bursa-pastoris) • Mustard family – 4 petals in a “cross” shape, seed pod with two layers • Leaves with jagged edges from plant base • Tiny pink flowers on tip of long seed stalk • Heart-shaped seed pods Desert Mistletoe (Phoradendron californicum) • Mistletoe family – poisonous parasite plant with green branches and berries • Very brittle, knobby twigs • Found on legume trees (trees that make beanpods like mesquite, acacia or palo verde) • RED coloration (twig & berry) Other Mistletoe (Phoradendron spp.) • Mistletoe family – poisonous parasite plant with green branches and berries • Very brittle, knobby, oval leaves • Found many long-living trees – Oak, hackberry, juniper, pine Plant List 6 (7 plants this week) Creosote Bush (Larrea tridentata) • Two fused leaves (smell like rain) on ribbed, grey-black branches • Flower yellow with “teeth” like petals • Fuzzy white fruit • Roots are extremely good at extracting water from the soil so that other plants cannot survive below it. • One of the oldest plants (12,000 years old), new shoots grow from the outer portions while the inner ones die (form a circle) Goat’s Head (Tribulus terrestris)* • Short, sprawling plant with many leaflets • Pale 5-petal flower • Five fruits with two horns each – Resembling a goat’s head – Also called Puncture Vine Filaree (Erodium cicutarium)* • Lavender 5-petal flower and a fruit that is long, green, and pointy • Common “weed,” short and in disturbed soil • Lobed leaves (with pointed tips), stems are reddish and hairy • (Geranium Family) Poison Ivy (Rhus radicans) • Three pointed oval leaflets ( often the one at the tip is on a stalk, the two at the sides are not) • Oil on leaves can cause skin to itch • Leaf edge may be toothed or wavy (or may not) Hopbush (Dodonaea viscosa) • Waxy, narrow leaves, 2-4 inches long with a rounded tip • Female plants make a 3 or 4 winged fruit, starts green and turns, yellow, then papery and white • Evergreen bush found along waterways Arizona Sycamore (Platanus wrightii) • Large tree with white bark (sometimes with peeling pieces), loses leaves in the winter • 5-fingered leaf (palmate) • Fruits are dry brown balls that have fluffy seeds when broken apart Note: Interbreeding between species is common Emory, Mexican White and Mexican Blue Oak are the most common in the area Oak (Quercus spp.) • Many species with overlapping variation in leaves – often toothed or lobed and leathery • Tree with rough grey bark (dense wood) • Make acorns Emory Oak Mexican Blue Oak White Oak