Yucca treculeana |
Yucca glauca |
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Don Quixote's lace, izote de chocha, palma pita, Spanish dagger, Trecul yucca |
beargrass, Great Plains yucca, narrowleaf yucca, plains yucca, small soapweed, soapweed yucca |
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Habit | Plants often forming colonies of rosettes, arborescent, to 7 m; rosettes with leaves hanging at various angles, giving an overall ragged appearance. | Plants forming small to moderate colonies, acaulescent or caulescent and arborescent, occasionally branched; rosettes 1–15 per colony, usually small. |
Stems | 1–8, occasionally 2–5-branched, 14–15 cm diam. |
erect, to 0.4 m. Leaf blade linear to linear-lanceolate, concave to concavo-convex, widest near middle, 40–60 × 0.8–1.2 cm, rigid, margins entire, filiferous, white, apex blunt to acicular. |
Leaf | blade erect, yellowish to bluish green, usually U- or V-shaped in cross section, thick, 36–128 × 1.6–7 cm, rigid, scabrous, margins entire, filiferous with straight, coarse fibers, light brown. |
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Inflorescences | erect, paniculate, arising mostly within rosettes, variable in shape, usually ovoid, 18 dm, glabrous, rarely slightly pubescent; peduncle scapelike, 0.3 m or longer. |
racemose, occasionally paniculate proximally, arising within or just beyond rosettes, 5–10 dm; bracts erect, leaflike, 2–5 cm, reduced toward apex; peduncle scapelike, 0.2–0.5 m, less than 2.5 cm diam. |
Flowers | pendent; perianth globose; tepals distinct, cream-colored, occasionally tinged with purple, ovate, 2.7–8.1 × 1–3.4 cm, apex rounded or acute; filaments 1–2.7 cm, short-pubescent proximally; anthers 1–6 mm; pistil 1.5–3.5 × 0.5–1 cm; ovary 1.3–3.3 cm; style 2–8 mm; stigmas distinct. |
pendent; tepals distinct, greenish white to white, elliptic, 5–5.3 × 2.6–3.5 cm, apex acute; filaments white, 1.7–1.9 cm; anthers yellow, 4 mm; pistil green, obovoid, 3–3.7 × 1.7 cm; style dark green, 10 mm; stigmas lobed. |
Fruits | pendent, baccate, indehiscent, 4.4–18.7 × 1.8–4.6 cm, fleshy, succulent. |
erect, capsular, dehiscent, cylindric to obovoid, rarely constricted, 5–8(–9) × 3–4.5(–5) cm, dehiscence septicidal. |
Seeds | black, 5–14 mm diam., 1–5 mm thick. |
black, slightly glossy, thin, 9–12 × 8–9 mm. |
Yucca treculeana |
Yucca glauca |
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Phenology | Flowering mid winter–spring. | Flowering spring. |
Habitat | Grassy or rocky slopes or mesas, brushland, chaparral | Prairies and waste areas in sandy or limestone soils |
Elevation | 0–1600 m (0–5200 ft) | 500–2600 m (1600–8500 ft) |
Distribution |
NM; TX; n Mexico (Chihuahua, Coahuila, Tamaulipas, Zacatecas)
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CO; IA; KS; MO; MT; ND; NE; NM; OK; SD; TX; WY; AB
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Discussion | Yucca glauca has the most extensive distribution of any North American Yucca. Its inflorescences are primarily racemose, but some plants exhibit branched inflorescences and varietal names have been given them. Yucca glauca and Y. arkansana are very similar. The leaves of Y. glauca are uniform in size, rigid, linear or linear-lanceolate, and up to 1.2 cm wide. In Y. arkansana, the young leaves immediately surrounding the peduncle are distinctly shorter than the outer leaves of the rosette, and mature leaves are generally somewhat flexible, lanceolate, and up to 2.5 cm wide. K. H. Clary’s (1997) DNA evidence does not indicate as close a relationship as the morphological characters suggest. J. M. Webber (1953) believed that Y. glauca forms hybrids with Y. baileyi, Y. elata, Y. constricta, and Y. angustissima. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Source | FNA vol. 26, p. 428. | FNA vol. 26, p. 437. |
Parent taxa | Agavaceae > Yucca | Agavaceae > Yucca |
Sibling taxa | ||
Synonyms | Y. argospatha, Y. aspera, Y. baccata var. australis, Y. baccata var. macrocarpa, Y. canaliculata, Y. canaliculata var. pendula, Y. crassifila, Y. longifolia, Y. torreyi, Y. treculeana var. succulenta, Y. undulata | Y. angustifolia, Y. glauca var. gurneyi, Y. glauca var. stricta, Y. stricta |
Name authority | Carrière: Rev. Hort., 580. (1858) | Nuttall: Cat. Pl. Upper Louisiana, no. 89. (1813) |
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