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Texas Ebony

Ebenopsis ebano

Description:

A thorny shrub up to a medium-sized tree, 40 feet tall and a trunk to 2 feet in diameter, with thick, spreading branches that form a dense, dark green crown of foliage The leaf is alternate, double-compound, about 2" long and 3" wide, with 2 to 4 pairs of pinnae and no terminal leaf or leaflet; each pinna has 3 to 5 pairs of leathery, dark green, evergreen leaflets, shiny on top and paler beneath, about 0.25" to 0.33" long. Flower is a dense, cylindrical spike of flowers, 1" to 1.5" long on a stalk 0.75" long, light yellow or cream-colored, fragrant, blooming from June to August. Fruit is a large, curved, somewhat flattened, hairy pod, 4" to 6" long and about 1" wide, dark brown or black, appearing in the fall and remaining on the branches until after the flowering season the following year. The branchlets are stout, form a zigzag pattern, and are armed with persistent paired spines at the nodes, 0.25" to 0.5" long. Bark is gray, turning very dark black and rough with age. Wood is heavy, hard, close-grained, dark red-brown tinged with purple, almost indestructible when used for fence posts, and valued for cabinet work. Seeds can be roasted and eaten, or polished and strung into jewelry.

Habitat:

Tohono Chul Park

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joanbstanley
Spotted by
joanbstanley

Tucson, Arizona, USA

Spotted on Nov 9, 2012
Submitted on Nov 26, 2012

Related Spottings

Texas Ebony or Ébano Ebony Spleenwort Texas Ebony Ebony spleenwort fern

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Western banded gecko Desert Mistletoe Saguaro Cactus Teddy Bear Cholla

Reference

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