Maclura cochinchinensis, commonly known as cockspur thorn, is a species of vine or scrambling shrub in the family Moraceae. The native range extends from China, ...
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Maclura cochinchinensis is a branched, thorny, spreading shrub with a scrambling habit, sometimes becoming a climber. It produces stems up to 10 metres long.
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Woody climbers or straggling shrubs with spines 0.5–2.5 cm long, often longer than leaves on juvenile plants; latex often ± milky.
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Common name: Cockspur Thorn; Cockspur Stem. Usually grows as a vine but sometimes flowers and fruits as an untidy shrub.
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Male flowers: calyx lobes 4, unequal; anthers short; pistillode pyramidal or shield-shaped. Female flowers: calyx lobes free or basally connate, apex thick.
Feb 28, 2024 · Description. Erect or climbing shrub to woody climber; twigs lenticellate, glabrous; spines curved, to 1.5 (–2.5) cm long.
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Maclura is a genus of flowering plants in the mulberry family, Moraceae. It includes the inedible Osage orange, which is used as mosquito repellent.
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EPPO Code: MACCO ; Preferred name: Maclura chinensis ; Authority: (Loureiro) Corner ; Kingdom Plantae ( 1PLAK ) ; Phylum Magnoliophyta ( 1MAGP ).
Commonly known for its large green fruits that are roughly the size of a baseball, they ripen in September through October.
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Trees , deciduous; sap milky. Branches with axillary spines. Terminal buds surrounded by bud scales. Leaves alternate; stipules caducous, free.
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