Common Names: Apache Plume, póñil
Synonyms: Fallugia paradoxa
Taxonomy: Rose (Rosaceae)
Habit: shrub
Size: 6’
Flowers: white…Flowers 2 inches
Bloom: May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec
Leaves: opposite
Fruit: Aggregated achenes, feathery, pink or purplish, 2 inches long
Description:
Fallugia paradoxa is an erect shrub not exceeding two meters in height. It has light gray or whitish peeling bark on its many thin branches. The leaves are each about a centimeter long and deeply lobed with the edges rolled under. The upper surface of the leaf is green and hairy while the underside is duller in color and scaly. The flower is roselike when new, with rounded white petals and a center filled with many thready stamens and pistils. The ovary of the flower remains after the white petals fall away, leaving many plumelike lavender styles, each 3 to 5 centimeters long. The plant may be covered with these dark pinkish clusters of curling, feathery styles after flowering. Each style is attached to a developing fruit, which is a small achene.
Distribution: AZ, CA, CO, NM, NV , OK, TX, UT
Seen: NV
Habitat: Dry, rocky slopes; open woods; dry washes; 3000 to 8000‘