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Canotia holacantha Torr.  
Family: Celastraceae
crucifixion thorn, more...Crucifixion-Thorn, canotia (es: corona de cristo, junco)
Canotia holacantha image
Max Licher
  • VPAP
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JANAS 30(2)
Plant: shrub or small tree; 2-5(-10) m tall; branches straight, slender, ascending Leaves: represented merely by a few alternate, widely spaced, soon deciduous, deltoid scales 1-2 mm long; stipules apparently absent; obtuse apically INFLORESCENCE: cymes short, few-flowered, axillary, often several arising together from a single leaf axil; bracts numerous, minute, deltoid Flowers: perfect; sepals 1 mm long and wide, acute, firm, tending to persist after anthesis; calyx lobes 5, imbricate in bud, brown, deltoid, small; petals 5, distinct, imbricate in bud, oblong to narrowly obovate, greenish white to yellowish white, 3.5-4 mm long, longer than the calyx lobes; stamens 5, tending to persist at base of fruit, slightly shorter than the petals, the anthers obcordate; pistil of (3-)5 carpels on a short, thick gynophore, the style slender, columnar, long 2-3 mm long, with 5 erect, deltoid, adaxially stigmatic apical lobes, ca. 0.2 mm Fruit: capsules 15-33 mm long at maturity, the seed-bearing portion ellipsoidal. SEEDS 7-8 mm long, minutely papillose, winged, the body 3-3.5 mm long, the wing membranaceous, as wide as body and about as long Misc: Sonoran Desert, desert grassland, juniper, and chaparral communities, often calcareous (and perhaps gypsiferous) slopes, sometimes locally dominant; (350-)600-1600 m [(1100-)2000-5200 ft]; (Mar-)May-Aug(-Sep) REFERENCES: Brasher, Jeffrey W. 1998. Celastraceae J. Ariz. - Nev. Acad. Sci. 30(2): 57.
Wiggins 1964, Benson and Darrow 1981, Kearney and Peebles 1969
Common Name: crucifixion thorn Duration: Perennial Nativity: Native Lifeform: Tree General: Shrub, 2-5 m tall with slender, rigid, spine-tipped branches which are flexible when young; branchlets pale green. Leaves: Small, scale-like and soon deciduous; triangular-ovate, obtuse at apex, about 1-1.5 mm long, leaving minutely papillose elevations as scars. Flowers: On racemes 1-3 cm long along branches, the parts glabrous; pedicels 2-6 mm long, calyx lobes deltoid, 1 mm long, subfleshy, margins finely erose; petals 3.5-4 mm long, oblong to narrowly oblanceolate, white; stamens equaling petals. Fruits: Dehiscent capsule along 10 lines, ovoid-elliptic, dark brown, faintly glaucous, body 6-8 mm in diameter, 9-13 mm long, awl shaped beak, 5-10 mm long; seed 3-3.5 mm long, dark brown with thin wing, as wide as body and as long. Ecology: Found on arid slopes from 2,000-5,000 ft (610-1524 m); flowers May-August. Distribution: s UT, AZ, se CA, nw MEX Notes: Told apart from the similar looking Koeberlinia by the fruit being a 2-celled berry and not having winged seeds; Koeberlinia is in the Caper (Capparaceae) family, so it has four sepals and petals. Koeberlinia is also found largely in the Chihuahuan desert, so it does not spread much past the Gila River. In the middle elevations just above the Parkinsonia communities in the Sonoran Desert, this becomes a more dominant plant. Can also be confused with Parkinsonia because of its green stems. Look for the growth form with many mostly parallel branches reaching for the sky or curving over; and the dark brown trunks (palo verde trees have green trunks and branches that spread at sharper angles). Ethnobotany: The berries are edible and were eaten. Etymology: Uncertain origins Synonyms: None Editor: SBuckley, 2010
Canotia holacantha
Open Interactive Map
Canotia holacantha image
Max Licher
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Max Licher
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Sky Jacobs
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Sky Jacobs
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Max Licher
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Leslie Landrum
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Leslie Landrum
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Max Licher
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Leslie Landrum
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Leslie Landrum
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Patrick Alexander
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Patrick Alexander
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Leslie Landrum
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Liz Makings
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Glenn Rink
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Dustin Wolkis
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Development supported by National Science Foundation Grants (DBI 9983132, BRC 0237418, DBI 0743827, DBI 0847966)
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