

Many beautiful shrubs
are found in Guadalupe Mountains National Park. NPS Photo
- Cookie Ballou |
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Shrubs of the Guadalupes
Apache Plume
Fallugia paradoxa is
a scraggly, clump-forming shrub found between 4000' and 8000'
in rocky or sandy soils along roadsides, canyons, and arroyos.
The small wedge-shaped leaves of this partially evergreen
shrub are divided into 3 to 7 blunt-tipped lobes. Conspicuous
white flowers are present all summer. Fruits are feathery
balls often tinged with red or pink. The fruit reminds some
people of an Indian feather bonnet, hence the common name,
apache plume.
Agrito, Algerita, or Barberry
Berberis sp. is an evergreen
shrub with stiff, spiny, holly-like leaflets on alternate,
compound leaves. The yellow flowers grow in small clusters
and yield a small reddish berry in the fall. A yellow dye
can be extracted from the stems, and jelly is made from the
berries. Three species are found in the park.
Mexican Orange
Choisya dumosa is an
aromatic, evergreen shrub of the canyons and hillsides, that
grows between 3000' and 7000'. The unique, palmately compound,
opposite leaves have 5 to 10 narrow, coarsely toothed, gland-dotted
leaflets. Flowers are solitary or in small clusters with 5
white petals. Young twigs are green and hairy, becoming gray
and warty with age. This shrub is a member of the citrus family,
but the fruits are not edible.
Desert Ceanothus or Desert Buckthorn
Ceanothus greggii is
associated with rocky and often brushy slopes above 2000'.
This heavily browsed, thorny shrub is seldom more than 4 feet
in height. Leathery and opposite, the gray-green leaves are
finely toothed and semi-evergreen. The tiny, white, fragrant
flowers are produced in small axillary clusters. The berrylike
fruit is green and three-lobed, turning reddish brown as it
ripens.
Mountain Mahogany
Cercocarpus montanus
is a slender-stemmed shrub of dry rocky areas found at elevations
above 3000'. Simple oval leaves are about 1 inch long with
distinct veins and coarse-toothed margins. The tiny flowers
lack petals, but the sepals form a greenish tube that holds
the many stamens. In autumn, fuzzy, spiral tails 1 to 3 inches
long are found on the small seeds.
Skunkbush, Squawbush, or Desert
Sumac
Rhus trilobata is a heavily
browsed shrub found above 3500'. Leaves are alternate and
compound with three lance-shaped, toothed or lobed leaflets.
Tiny flowers with yellow petals appear in dense clusters before
the leaves develop. The reddish-orange, hairy berries are
used to make a lemonade-like drink. Indians used the stems
in basket making. The leaves turn red in fall and are aromatic
when crushed.
Evergreen Sumac
Rhus virens, an evergreen
shrub of rocky hillsides and cliffs, is found above 2000'.
The alternate, compound leaves are leathery with 5 to 9 leaflets
and entire margins. Tiny white flowers appear in clusters
after rains. The reddish fruit is covered with short hairs
and used to make a lemonade-type beverage.
Catclaw Acacia
Acacia greggii is found
between 3500' and 5000' along streams and arroyos and in canyons.
This shrub or small tree often grows in almost impenetrable
thickets. Leaves are bipinnate with 2 to 6 pinnae each and
4 to 14 oblong, prominently nerved leaflets. Flowers are cylindrical,
yellow, and grow up to 11/2 inches in length. Seed pods are
flat, linear, and irregular constricted between seeds. Spines
along the branches are curved back like the claws of a cat,
hence the name.
Creosotebush
Larrea tridentata is one of
the most long-lived and abundant desert plants of North and
South America. It is often found in pure stands. The small,
leathery, evergreen leaves occur in pairs united at the base.
When it rains, five-petaled flowers appear and the air is
permeated with the fragrance of creosote bush. The fuzzy white
seed balls are relished by rodents. When crushed, the resinous
leaves smell like the petroleum by-product, creosote.
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