The organ pipe cactus or pitahaya (Stenocereus thurberi) in Oaxaca, Mexico. Pitahaya, native to Mexico and the United States, is usually pollinated by bats. The plant produces fruit about the size of a tennis ball. https://t.co/hognGN7ZTO
Aqui con mi amigo y veterinario de fauna silvestre Orlando en el monte reverdecido en Cajeme cerca de Yucuribampo, Sonora. Enmarcados por un Pitayo (Stenocereus thurberi) y un Etcho (Pachycereus pecten-aboriginum). https://t.co/lgP83v6ykX
I’ve been on the Organ Pipe National Monument fiasco until now. I don’t like first-flush reactionism. But as an award-winning (neighborhood garden award, but nonetheless) cactus-gardener and cactophile, what’s happening angers me. Greatly. Stenocereus thurberi
@Maderitah Es que sí son impresionantes Pero sí, para encontrar información correcta es apenas con los nombres científicos. La pitaya dulce es Stenocereus thurberi, las pitahayas son varias especies de los géneros Hylocereus y Selenicereus (no sé si todas sean comestibles)
Organ Pipe Cactus - Stenocereus thurberi by Belle Isle's Anna Scripps Whitcomb Conservatory in The Desert House on PlantsMap https://t.co/7hySHS32rV #batweek #pollinator #cacti
Crassula ovata x stenocereus thurberi, aka "Money Cactus". http://t.co/2VtM8swlPI
@Hozier , Glad you had a safe journey to Tempe, thought you might enjoy this lil' guide to some of the cacti/cactus you may see, there's even the 'Organ Pipe Cactus' aka Stenocereus thurberi. Take a look when you have a minute <3 https://t.co/61vWYKXzz1
Intentando averiguar si mi minicactus es: Copiapoa Marginata? Mila Caespitosa? Stenocereus Thurberi? Echinocereus Fasciculatus? XDDD