Rank: Advanced Member
Groups: Administrators
Joined: 6/24/2012(UTC) Posts: 5,031 Points: 2,424 Location: Thung Lũng Lá Rơi Thanks: 231 times Was thanked: 87 time(s) in 84 post(s)
|
Chị PC Hoa nầy tên Yucca có thể sống được khí hậu khắc nghiệt, nở cuối Xuân đầu Hạ.
Yucca This article is about the genus comprising species of perennials, shrubs, and trees. For other uses, see Yucca (disambiguation).
Yucca
Yucca filamentosa in New Zealand Scientific classification Kingdom: Plantae (unranked): Angiosperms (unranked): Monocots Order: Asparagales Family: Agavaceae Genus: Yucca L. Species many, see text The yuccas comprise the genus Yucca of 40-50 species of perennials, shrubs, and trees in the agave family Agavaceae, notable for their rosettes of evergreen, tough, sword-shaped leaves and large terminal clusters of white or whitish flowers. They are native to the hot and dry parts of North America, Central America, and the West Indies.
Yuccas have a very specialized pollination system, being pollinated by the yucca moth; the insect purposefully transfers the pollen from the stamens of one plant to the stigma of another, and at the same time lays an egg in the flower; the moth larva then eats some of the developing seeds, but far from all.
Yuccas are widely grown as ornamental plants in gardens. Many yuccas also bear edible parts, including fruits, seeds, flowers, flowering stems, and more rarely roots, but use of these is sufficiently limited that references to yucca as food more often than not stem from confusion with the similarly spelled but botanically unrelated yuca.
Dried yucca has the lowest ignition temperature of any wood, making it desirable for fire-starting.[citation needed]
The "yucca flower" is the state flower of New Mexico. No species name is given in the citation.
|