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Tamarix aphylla (L.) Karst.  
Family: Tamaricaceae
Athel Tamarisk, more...athel tree, salt cedar, athel, saltcedar, tamarisk, tamarix, Tamarisk, Salt Cedar (es: pino salado, pino, támaris)
[Tamarix articulata Vahl]
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Leslie Landrum
  • SW Field Guide
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Jepson 2012
Common Name: Athel tamarisk Duration: Perennial Nativity: Non-Native Lifeform: Tree Wetland Status: FAC General: Shrubs to trees, perennials, to 25 m tall, much branched, young stems often pendent, slender, covered by leaves, hairy or glabrous, trunk bark rough. Leaves: Alternate, small, awl- or scale-like, sessile, united completely around the stem, giving the stem a jointed appearance, to 2 mm long, tips mucronate, with salt-excreting glands and usually encrusted with excreted salt. Flowers: White, pink, or red, with 5 free petals, these 2-2.5 mm long, oblong to elliptic, sepals 5, united at the base, 1-1.5 mm long, round with obtuse tips and entire margins, stamens 5, alternate the nectary disk lobes, inflorescences of racemes 2-6 cm long, borne on current or previous year's twigs, bracts scale-like and clasping, triangular, with acuminate tips. Fruits: Lanceolate, loculicidal, valved capsules. Seeds many, hairs in a tuft at tips, hairs longer than the seeds. Ecology: Found in washes and on roadsides, to 650 ft (198 m); flowering May-November. Distribution: Arizona, California, Nevada, Texas, Utah Notes: This species is considered uncommon in California, and is noted by Jepson to hybirdize with Tamarix ramosissima and T. chinensis. Ethnobotany: Wood used in winter for fuel. Etymology: Tamarix comes from the Latin name for this plant derived from the Tamaris River in Spain, and aphylla means leafless. Synonyms: Tamarix articulata Editor: LCrumbacher2012
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Open Interactive Map
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Leslie Landrum
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Leslie Landrum
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Sue Carnahan
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Sue Carnahan
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Sue Carnahan
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University of Florida Herbarium
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The National Science Foundation
Development supported by National Science Foundation Grants (DBI 9983132, BRC 0237418, DBI 0743827, DBI 0847966)
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