![]() Click ‘Customise Cookies’ to decline these cookies, make more detailed choices, or learn more. Third parties use cookies for their purposes of displaying and measuring personalised ads, generating audience insights, and developing and improving products. This includes using first- and third-party cookies, which store or access standard device information such as a unique identifier. If you agree, we’ll also use cookies to complement your shopping experience across the Amazon stores as described in our Cookie Notice. We also use these cookies to understand how customers use our services (for example, by measuring site visits) so we can make improvements. Its fibers have been used for cloth and it produces a yellow dye.We use cookies and similar tools that are necessary to enable you to make purchases, to enhance your shopping experiences and to provide our services, as detailed in our Cookie Notice. The plant is also used as a flavoring, and for its essential oil, known as genetic absolute. Retama has made its way into the ethnobotany of the indigenous Aymara and Quechua cultures. ![]() It is one of the most common ornamental plants, often seen growing along sidewalks in La Paz. In Bolivia and Peru, the plant is known as retama, (not to be confused with the genus Retama), and has become very well established in some areas. ![]() ![]() It has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit. The plant is used as an ornamental plant in gardens and in landscape plantings. It was first introduced to California as an ornamental plant. Spartium junceum has been widely introduced into other areas and is regarded as a noxious invasive species in places with a Mediterranean climate such as California and Oregon, Hawaii, central Chile, southeastern Australia, the Western Cape in South Africa and the Canary Islands and Azores. They burst open, often with an audible crack, spreading seed from the parent plant. In late summer, the legumes (seed pods) mature black and reach 8–10 cm (3–4 in) long. In late spring and summer shoots are covered in profuse fragrant yellow pea-like flowers 1 to 2 cm across. The leaves are of little importance to the plant, with much of the photosynthesis occurring in the green shoots (a water-conserving strategy in its dry climate). It has thick, somewhat succulent grey-green rush-like shoots with very sparse small deciduous leaves 1 to 3 cm long and up to 4 mm broad. junceum is a vigorous, deciduous shrub growing to 2–4 m (7–13 ft) tall, rarely 5 m (16 ft), with main stems up to 5 cm (2 in) thick, rarely 10 cm (4 in). This species is native to the Mediterranean in southern Europe, southwest Asia, and northwest Africa, where it is found in sunny sites, usually on dry, sandy soils. The Latin specific epithet junceum means "rush-like", referring to the shoots, which show a passing resemblance to those of the rush genus Juncus. There are many binomials in Spartium that are of dubious validity (see below). It is the sole species in the genus Spartium, but is closely related to the other brooms in the genera Cytisus and Genista. Spartium junceum, the Spanish broom, rush broom, or weaver's broom, is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae. Spanish broom Seeds (Spartium junceum) Price for Package of 10 seeds.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |