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YUCCA

:''For the potato-like vegetable, see yuca.''
''Yucca filamentosa'' in New Zealand

''Yucca decipiens'' in Zacatecas, Mexico

Joshua Trees(''Yucca brevifolia''), growing in the Mojave Desert.

The 'yuccas' comprise the genus '''Yucca''' of 40-50 species of perennials, shrubs, and trees in the agave family Agavaceae, notable for their rosettes of evergreen, tough, sword-shaped leaves and large terminal clusters of white or whitish flowers. They are native to the hot and dry parts of North America, Central America, and the West Indies.
''Yucca brevifolia'' flowers

Yuccas have a very specialized pollination system, being pollinated by the yucca moth; the insect purposefully transfers the pollen from the stamens of one plant to the stigma of another, and at the same time lays an egg in the flower; the moth larva then eats some of the developing seeds, but far from all.
Yuccas are widely grown as ornamental plants in gardens. Many yuccas also bear edible parts, including fruits, seeds, flowers, flowering stems, and more rarely roots, but use of these is sufficiently limited that references to yucca as food more often than not stem from confusion with the similarly spelled but botanically unrelated yuca.
Dried yucca wood has the lowest ignition temperature of any other wood, making it one of the more desirable woods for fire-starting.
The "yucca flower" is the state flower of New Mexico. No species name is given in the citation.

Contents
Species
Cultivars
Other facts
References
Gallery

Species



★ ''Yucca aloifolia'', Aloe yucca

★ ''Yucca brevifolia'', Joshua tree

★ ''Yucca constricta'', Buckley's yucca

★ ''Yucca decipiens''

★ ''Yucca filamentosa'', Spoonleaf yucca or Filament yucca

★ ''Yucca filifera'', Palma Chuna yucca

★ ''Yucca flaccida'', Flaccid leaf yucca

★ ''Yucca glauca'', Great Plains yucca

★ ''Yucca gloriosa'', Moundlily yucca, Adam's needle, Spanish Dagger

★ ''Yucca grandiflora'', Sahuiliqui yucca

★ ''Yucca harrimaniae'', Harriman's yucca

★ ''Yucca intermedia''

★ ''Yucca jaliscensis'', Izote

★ ''Yucca kanabensis'', Kanab yucca

★ ''Yucca lacandonica'', Tropical yucca

★ ''Yucca madrensis'', Soco yucca

★ ''Yucca nana'', Dwarf yucca

★ ''Yucca pallida'', Pale yucca

★ ''Yucca periculosa'', Izote

★ ''Yucca recurvifolia'', Curve-leaf yucca

★ ''Yucca rigida'', Blue yucca

★ ''Yucca rostrata'', Big Bend yucca

★ ''Yucca rupicola'', Texas yucca, or Twist-leaf yucca

★ ''Yucca schidigera'', Mojave yucca

★ ''Yucca schottii'', Hoary yucca or Mountain yucca

★ ''Yucca standleyi''

★ ''Yucca thompsoniana'', Thompson's Yucca

★ ''Yucca thornberi''

★ ''Yucca torreyi'', Torrey yucca

★ ''Yucca treculiana'', Texas bayonette, Trecul's yucca

★ ''Yucca valida'', Datilillo

★ ''Yucca yucatana'', Yucatan yucca
A number of other species previously classified in ''Yucca'' are now classified in the genera ''Dasylirion'', ''Furcraea'', ''Hesperaloe'', ''Hesperoyucca'' and ''Nolina''.

Cultivars


In the years from 1897 to 1907, Carl Ludwig Sprenger created and named 122 Yucca hybrids.

Other facts


Because of their omnipresence in the southwestern United States, yuccas have lent their name to several places:

Yucca, Arizona

Yucca Valley, California

Yucca Mountain, Nevada

Yucca House National Monument
Yuccas are poisonous to rabbits.

References



★ M. & G. Irish, ''Agaves, Yuccas, and Related Plants: a Gardener's Guide'' (Timber Press, 2000). ISBN 0-88192-442-3

Common names of yucca species

UVSC Herbarium - Yucca

New Mexico Statutes and Court Rules: State Flower

Gallery




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