DESCRIPTION:
Large shrub or tree up to 30' or higher. Bark dark brown to gray. Spines
whitish-gray and straight. Leaves are bipinnately compound. Flowers are
greenish-yellow, forming dense, cylindrical, clusters to 4" long
in spring and sometimes again after the monsoon rains. Fruit in pods that
start out green and turn yellowish-brown. Difficult to differentiate from
Honey Mesquite (P. glandulosa) that also occurs in this area (Velvet
Mesquite tends to have 4 versus 2 primary leaflets and tends to have duller
green leaves compared to Honey Mesquite). Fabaceae
(Legume) Family.
NATURAL HISTORY: Holds the record for deepest root (160'); these taproots
can "tap" into deep, underground water supplies that aren't
available to the "average" plant. Its seeds need to be scarified
(abraded in flash flood or digestive tract for example) to germinate.
In the Pleistocene over 10,000 years ago, the megafauna (e.g., mastodons
and ground sloths) ate, passed, and dispersed the seeds, now cattle often
fulfill the niche, to the bane of the ranchers when the mesquite becomes
too dense. Yet, Velvet Mesquite has many uses for humans, including food
(its pods make a sweet flour), furniture, charcoal ("mesuite-grilled"),
fabric, medicine, and it even provides the "gum" of gumdrops.
Of course the tree is also valuable to other organisms for food, shelter,
etc.
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