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Salsola (Kali) tragus
Kali tragus is native to Eurasia but in the 1870s it appeared in South Dakota when flaxseed from Russia turned out to be contaminated with Kali seeds. Itis a type of tumbleweed. In habit the young plant is erect, but it grows into a rounded clump of branched, tangled stems, each one up to about a metre long. Depending on the plant's genetics and condition, the leaves and stems may be green, red, or striped, and they may be hairless or pubescent. The leaves are tipped with spines that in most varieties are so sharp that the plants are best handled with gloves and other suitably protective clothing, though some genetic variants have only a hair at the tip. On the young plant leaves may be more than 5 cm long, succulent and more or less cylindrical; these juvenile leaves are deciduous and drop off as the plant matures. The leaves of the mature plant are persistent, leathery, broader and shorter than the young leaves (seldom more than 1 cm in length), rigid and spine-tipped. They remain on the stem till the plant dies at the end of the season. In the axil of the mature leaf there are two leaf-like bracts with a flower between them. The flower lacks petals, but is surrounded by a disk of wide, winged sepals, whitish to pink in color.
Lake Crowley, CA.
2 Comments
Tienes razon Patricia. Parece Salsola kali o tragus. Lo voy a añadir ahora. Muchas gracias por la sugerencia! ;-)
Hola Marta!
a mi me parece alguna especie de Salsola, he visto que en Norteamerica existe la Salsola tragus, mira a ver que te parece!
un saludo!