Kips Bay Sunday Greenmarket also has cacti for sale...I am not used to the colorful ones, exact for some Infomercial I see occasionally about the Miracle Nopalea Cactus, which grows only in the Sonoran Desert or something ( I keep meaning to force my friend who lives in the Sonoran Desert to spill the beans to me about the Nopalea bit..I am sure he knows...he goes out for hikes in the desert all the time and must see them...mostly he just tells me how he just ran across ANOTHER would be immigrant who is so unprepared for what they are doing that they are stumbling around in a horrible fog..( if fog is a word you can use in a desert context).
OK, SOMETHING about the cacti--but not that much this time...these postings are beginning to read like the telephone book...
A cactus (plural: cacti, cactuses, or cactus[1]) is a member of the plant family Cactaceae, within the order Caryophyllales. The word "cactus" derives, through Latin, from the Ancient Greek κάκτος (kaktos), a name originally used for a spiny plant whose identity is not certain. Cacti are native to the Americas, ranging from Patagonia in the south to parts of western Canada in the north—except for Rhipsalis baccifera, which also grows in Africa and Sri Lanka.
Most cacti live in habitats subject to at least some drought. Many live in extremely dry environments, even being found in the Atacama Desert,
one of the driest places on earth. Cacti show many adaptations to
conserve water. Most species of cacti have lost true leaves, retaining
only spines, which are highly modified leaves. As well as defending against herbivores,
spines help prevent water loss by reducing air flow close to the cactus
and providing some shade. Cactus spines are produced from specialized
structures called areoles, a kind of highly reduced branch. Areoles are an identifying feature of cacti. As well as spines, areoles give rise to flowers, which are usually tubular and multipetaled.
In the absence of leaves, enlarged stems carry out photosynthesis. Unlike many other succulents,
the stem is the only part of most cacti where this vital process takes
place. Cactus stems also store water, and are often ribbed or fluted,
which allows them to expand and contract easily. Cacti occur in a wide
range of shapes and sizes. The tallest free-standing cactus is Pachycereus pringlei, with a maximum recorded height of 19.2 m (63 ft),[2] and the smallest is Blossfeldia liliputiana, only about 1 cm (0.4 in) in diameter at maturity.[3]
The smaller cacti usually have globe-shaped stems, combining the
highest possible volume with the lowest possible surface area. Many
cacti have short growing seasons
and long dormancies, and are able to react quickly to any rainfall,
helped by an extensive but relatively shallow root system. A fully grown
saguaro (Carnegiea gigantea) is said to be able to absorb as much as 200 US gallons (760 l; 170 imp gal) of water during a rainstorm.[4]
Like other succulent plants, most cacti employ a special mechanism called "crassulacean acid metabolism" (CAM) as part of photosynthesis. Transpiration, during which carbon dioxide
enters the plant and water escapes, does not take place during the day
at the same time as photosynthesis, but instead occurs at night. The
plant stores the carbon dioxide it takes in as malic acid,
retaining it until daylight returns, and only then using it in
photosynthesis. Because transpiration takes place during the cooler,
more humid night hours, water loss is significantly reduced.
A few species differ significantly in appearance from most of the family. At least superficially, plants of the genus Pereskia
resemble other trees and shrubs growing around them. They have
persistent leaves, and when older, bark-covered stems. Their areoles
identify them as cacti, and in spite of their appearance, they, too,
have many adaptations for water conservation. Pereskia is
considered close to the ancestral species from which all cacti evolved.
In tropical regions, other cacti grow as forest climbers and epiphytes
(plants that grow on trees). Their stems are typically flattened,
almost leaf-like in appearance, with fewer or even no spines, such as
the well-known Christmas cactus or Thanksgiving cactus (in the genus Schlumbergera).
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