PLANT IDENTIFICATION
TREES
Catclaw Acacia Bipinnately compound leaves Brown, curved spines
Catclaw Acacia Fruit: bean-like Flower: yellow, elongated
Whitethorn Acacia Leaves: Bipinnately compound Spines: Straight, white Bark: Reddish
Whitethorn Acacia Flower: yellow, spherical
Desert Ironwood Leaves: Simple pinnately compound Flowers: Purple Spines: dark, thin, slightly curved
Desert Ironwood
Velvet Mesquite My knee for scale Leaves: Large, bipinnately compound Relatively large leaflets and flowers
Velvet Mesquite Fruit: bean-like Flowers: yellow, long
Foothills Palo Verde Leaves: Bipinnately compound 4+ pairs of leaflets/“leaf” Spines: none along branches Bark: green
Foothills Palo Verde Fruit: bean-like Flower: yellow, with white, upper banner petal
Blue Palo Verde Leaves: bipinnately compound 3 or fewer pairs of leaflets/“leaf” Spines along branches Bark: Green Spine Spine
Blue Palo Verde Flower: yellow, with yellow, upper banner petal
Shrubs
Fairy Duster Leaves: Bipinnately compound Fine, dark green leaflets Spines: none Bark: whitish
Fairy Duster Flower: unique
Desert Mistletoe Parasitic Appear as clumps in trees most commonly Phainopepla is main vector
Jojoba Leaves: simple, vertical Dioecious Nuts appear on females in spring and summer
Jojoba Nuts produce high quality wax that is liquid at room temperature Instead of sperm whale oil
Brittlebush Leaves: simple, entire, triangle-shaped Flowers: yellow (like lots of other plants
Brittlebush Yellow, like many other plants
Limberbush Leaves: simple, heart-shaped Bark: red Flexible limbs
Limberbush Flowers: small, white
Ocotillo Multiple arms Flowers: red, tubular Spines: straight, stout Drought deciduous
Triangle-leaf Bursage Leaves: simple, toothed, triangle-shaped
Triangle-leaf Bursage Burrs in fall
Ratany Non-descript plant most of year Flowers: purple Fruit: spined Hemi-parasite
Ratany
Creosote Bush Leaves have a single pair of leaflets Yellow flowers developing into white seed pods
Creosote Bush Creosote bush gall and midge
Desert Broom Leaves more like twigs
Desert Broom Leaves more like twigs
Burroweed Finely divided leaves Flowers: yellow turning to white Last year’s flower stalks remain for long time
Burroweed
Canyon Ragweed Leaves: simple, long, triangle-shaped with toothed margin Usually occurs in washes and canyons
Canyon Ragweed Flowers: nondescript
Sotol (Desert Spoon) Rosette of leaves Leaves have spines along edges but not at tips
Cacti
Saguaro
Saguaro Seed 2000 seeds/fruit 100 fruits/year 100-150 years = 20 million+ seeds in lifetime, But only one survives to replace individual in stable population
Saguaro Seedlings Grow under nurse plant Grow ½” first year Grow 1’ in 15 years Grow 10’ in 40 years (mature)
Saguaro Fruit is edible Flower: white, large, blooms at night and closes forever the next day
Southwest (or Fishhook) Barrel Cactus Spines: long, hooked Fruit: yellow
Southwest (or Fishhook) Barrel Cactus Flowers: yellow, orange, or red usually Plant usually leans
Hedgehog Cacti Multiple heads Spines not as dense as pincushion cacti
Prickly Pear Cacti Pads Flowers: many colors Fruit: purple when ripe
Fishhook Pincushion Cactus Very dense spines Ring of pink flowers near top Spines: longest with hooks
Chain-fruit (or Jumping) Cholla Fruit stay attached and form chains. Flowers: often pink
Chain-fruit (or Jumping) Cholla http://waynesword.palomar.edu/plmay98.htm Blown up 350x; overlapping scales on spine make pulling out the spine very difficult
Teddybear Cholla Fruit are single and do not form chains.
Teddybear Cholla Spines: tend to be more dense than chain-fruit cholla
Staghorn Cholla Spines less dense and arms more spreading than chain-fruit or teddy-bear cholla
Christmas Cholla One spine per areole Red fruit in winter Thin segments