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Valley Nature Center is a 6-acre park and nature preserve in Gibson City Park, Weslaco, Texas. Its focus is environmental education about the natural history of the Lower Rio Grande Valley . The center's activities include a summer camp, weekly programs for all ages, birding trips, natural history classes and lectures.
The range of appropriate habitat in Mexico covers 2.5 times the amount of land as in Texas. [3] [1] Many of the plants are located in remote areas, [3] which helps protect them from people. [2] A major threat to the species is harvesting by cactus enthusiasts and dealers. [1] [4] This cactus is generally spherical or cylindrical in shape, and ...
Cactus is a city in Moore County, Texas, United States, located along U.S. Route 287. The population was 3,057 at the 2020 census. [4] "Cactus Texas", a song by Waylon Jennings, is a sketch of Cactus from years past. [5]
Plants are usually solitary, but may form clumps. [2] It typically grows to about 6 to 10 centimeters in diameter, growing to 50 cm (20 in) tall, it is a perennial with succulent stems with a blue or gray-green body that is somewhat felty at the top and often thorny. The cactus has 8 to 13 straight or twisted ribs, each divided into crookedly ...
The plants and wildlife found in the park, despite it being within a city, are typical of those found throughout the rest of the desert. Barrel cactus, yucca, Mexican and California poppies are common plants. [3] Trees like cottonwood, hackberry, juniper and oak grow along the springs on the mountain slopes. [6]
The cane cholla's range is the arid regions of Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, Oklahoma, Kansas, and Texas, south to Durango, Zacatecas, and San Luis Potosí. [5] It occurs at altitudes from 1,200 to 2,300 m (3,900 to 7,500 ft) and is hardy for a cactus (USDA Zone 5A).
Peniocereus greggii is a cactus species native to Arizona, New Mexico, Texas (); and Chihuahua, Coahuila, Durango, Sonora, and Zacatecas (). [1] Common names include Arizona queen of the night, nightblooming cereus and Reina de la noche.
Mammillaria prolifera, commonly known as the Texas or West Indian nipple-cactus, grape cactus, or hair-covered cactus, is a species of cactus native to North America. Three subspecies are currently recognized: M. prolifera subsp. prolifera (Cuba, Dominican Republic, and Haiti), M. prolifera subsp. arachnoidea (Mexico), and M. prolifera subsp. texana (Mexico and the United States).