Author: Roberta (Page 189 of 562)

Seed of the Week: White Leadtree

As Craig recognized, our mystery seeds last week were from the white leadtree, Leucaena leucocephala.

Leucaena leucocephala-earlier

Originally from Central and South America, the white tree has been planted throughout the world. It has been used for forage and wood.

Leucaena leucocephala-gggHere in Arizona it has been planted as a street tree.

Unfortunately the characteristics that make it attractive – being hardy and fast growing – also make it a potential weed. It is already on the invasive list in many countries.

Leucaena leucocephala -flowers

The leadtree produces many white, round flowers throughout the spring. They turn brown once they have been pollinated.

also called white leadtree

White leadtrees produce many seed pods, which can look messy hanging on the tree.

mystery-seed-pods-214Each of those bumps is a seed, stacked up in rows in the pod. One pod may contain up to 20 seeds.

white leadtree seedsThat’s a lot of new potential trees!

Do leadtrees grow where you live?

What do you think of them?

 

 

Bug of the Week: Large Orange Sulphur Butterfly

Back in March I found a lovely large orange sulphur butterfly. At the time I speculated it might lay eggs on our desert fern.

desert-fern-butterflyThis week I found this faded specimen. It looks pretty worn.

desert-fern-butterfly-2It even has slight tears in the edges of its wings.

Regardless, it was obviously a female. How did I know?

 

butterfly-egg-sulfur-desert-fernBecause she was laying eggs on the desert fern tree. Yes, that white speck is a freshly-laid butterfly egg.

Will the eggs hatch? It is awfully hot and dry. Only time will tell.

Update:

desert-fern-chewed-leavesAlthough I found evidence that something had chewed on the desert fern leaves, there was no sign of a caterpillar. Possibly the caterpillars hide during the day, but I think it is more likely they fell victim to the paper wasps constantly searching our plants. The wasps specialize in catching caterpillars to feed to their own offspring.

Mystery Seed of the Week 214

Sometimes the identity of the plant is a mystery to me, too.

mystery-seed-214Take this legume I found growing behind the local home improvement store.

mystery-seed-pods-214The tree is covered with these pods.

It took me several visits over several months to finally figure out its identity. Do you recognize what plant these seeds are from? If you choose to, please leave a comment with your ideas.

New mystery seeds and Seed of the Week answers are posted on Tuesdays.

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