Jonathan Cohen's photos
Saguaro Skeleton – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago Park, Phoenix, Arizona
Barking Up the Right Tree – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago Park, Phoenix, Arizona
Seeing Pink – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago Park, Phoenix, Arizona
An Enchanted Forest – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago Park, Phoenix, Arizona
A Prickly Minuet – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago Park, Phoenix, Arizona
Minuet: A slow, stately dance, in triple measure, for two dancers; derived from France in the latter part of the seventeenth century, and fashionable throughout the eighteenth. (Oxford English Dictionary)
Crested Saguaro Cactus – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago Park, Phoenix, Arizona
Even when saguaro cacti grow in their normal form, they rarely grow symmetrically. Saguaros sometimes grow in odd or misshapen forms. The growing tip of the cactus occasionally produces a fan-like form which is referred to as crested or cristate. These crested saguaro cacti, Carnegia gigantea forma cristata, are rare. Biologists disagree as to why some saguaros grow in this unusual form. Some speculate that it is a genetic mutation. Others say it is the result of a lightning strike or freeze damage. At this point we simply do not know what causes this rare, crested form.
Cactus Burst – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago Park, Phoenix, Arizona
Senita Cactus – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago Park, Phoenix, Arizona
Since it cannot tolerate even the slightest frost, the senita (pachycereus schottii – synonyms include Pilocereus schottii and Lophocereus schottii) is by far the rarest of Arizona’s big three cacti (the others being saguaro and organ pipe). The senita is found only in a small narrow band along the southern edge of Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument. The best place to see them is at Senita Basin, on the sheltered, south-facing slopes of the Puerto Blanco Mountains. Like the organ pipe, the senita is much more widespread in Mexico, where frosts never occur. Even in the national monument, many specimens show damage as a result of cold weather spells.
Pachycereus schottii forms extensive clusters, of a hundred or more stems, up to 20 feet tall, branching from the base – like the organ pipe, but easily distinguished from the organ pipe as the senita has fewer ribs (five or six), as well as shorter, lighter and more widely separated spines, and because the top portion of each stem is covered by dark, hairy tufts, after which the plant is named. Senita (‘old’ in Spanish) comes from the resemblance to an old man’s beard. The short spines allow the bright yellowish green stem to be prominently visible. Flowers are borne along the stems, unlike the saguaro and organ pipe which bloom from the tips.
Standing Sentry, Take #2 – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago Park, Phoenix, Arizona
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