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When
an American travels abroad they always see
plants and animals that remind them of
home. Many times they are not related to
the American species at all , and they are
often members of entirely different
families. When in Africa one sees a
plethora of spiny plants that resemble
cactus that are euphorbias.
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candelabra
tree in bloom
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In fact the
candelabra tree is a Euphorbia that grows
up to forty feet tall with many upright
cactus-like limbs and many spines. But
they have very tiny deciduous leaves.
Other species are vine-like and still some
are Milkweeds with round leaves eight
inches in diameter. Perhaps the best known
member of this family is the Poinsettia.
Along the equator where it receives about
twelve hours of daylight and twelve hours
of darkness year around, the upper leaves
and leaf bracts remain red throughout the
year. Poinsettias grow to be large
ornamental trees there.
One must be
careful not to mistake one of the many
cacti that have been transplanted into
foreign lands. Cacti, like Hummingbirds,
are endemic to the Americas. Native to
nowhere else on earth.
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The most
common cactus imported into foreign lands
are the opuntias, or "Prickly Pear" group.
The spines may be burned off and the
leaves then used for cattle or human food.
One cultivar is very large and has been
bred without spines, this is the most
desirable cactus for food. Of course, all
cactus fruits are edible and some are very
good. Many other cactus species have been
introduced for ornamental uses.
In America we
are all familiar with Milkweed which is
our most abundant Euphorbia. In fact it is
the only food plant utilized by the
Monarch Butterfly (Danaus plexippus), and
if the Milkweed is not present, the
Monarch cannot live. An interesting thing
is, that butterfly was an American endemic
until it began extending its range and
crossed the Pacific Ocean. It stopped and
colonized every place where milkweeds
grows. Additionally it went into Asia and
throughout Europe. Oddly enough it did not
enter Africa which is the home of hundreds
of Euphorbias including
Milkweeds.
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Euphorbia bussei
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A closely
related species which is known as The
Queen, is found there but it does not have
the black markings of the Monarch, and in
captivity does not breed with that
species. It, however, is improporly listed
in some books as a Monarch.
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A beautiful
Queen lives in Southern California, it is
non-migratory, does not breed with the
Monarch and also lacks the black wing
markings. It, as with all Queens, is not
bright reddish orange but more of a
orange-tan color. It is not as restricted
to feeding upon only one species of
Euphorbia as the true Monarch does.
So what sets
the Euphorbias apart from other plants?
Not the latex, nor the poison principle
present, but the way they reproduce. All
plants are identified that way, and
Euphorbias are very different in the way
they reproduce.
Because
Alaska does not have Euphorbias, the
Monarch cannot survive there.
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All members
of this family have white latex and are
toxic and many others are deadly
poisonous. During the early part of World
War two, people were collecting latex from
wild Milkweed for the government. They
were also growing it as a cash crop. It
makes a fairly good rubber substitute, but
science found a way to make better latex
chemically so the Milkweed latex was no
longer needed.
-End
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Euphorbia uhligana
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OBSERVATIONS
INDEX
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