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Topic: New Mexican locust


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  Robinia neomexicana
Mexico locust is found from the western mountains of Trans-Pecos Texas, Arizona and New Mexico, north to southern Colorado and to the dry hills and stream banks in southern
New Mexico locust is a rare spiny shrub or small tree and forms large thorny thickets that sprout freely from stumps and roots.
New Mexico locust seed is pre-soaked in warm water for 48 hours that are later sown individually in pots during their first winter, plant lets are planted outdoors during the summer months.
medplant.nmsu.edu /robinia_neomexicana.htm   (634 words)

  
 New York Hispano - Guia de informacion y servicios para la comunidad latina de New York
New York, Buffalo, Rochester, Yonkers, Syracuse, Albany, New Rochelle, Mount Vernon, Schenectady, Utica hispano; hispanos hispanic latino latinos Latinos Latino latina o latinas Latina hispana hispanas.
New York, Buffalo, Rochester, Yonkers, Syracuse, Albany, New Rochelle, Mount Vernon, Schenectady, Utica hispano hispanos, hispanic latino, latinos Latinos Latino latina Latina hispana.
New York, Buffalo, Rochester, Yonkers, Syracuse, Albany, New Rochelle, Mount Vernon, Schenectady, Utica new York, buffalo, rochester, yonkers, syracuse, albany, new rochelle, mount vernon, schenectady, utica, NY.
www.newyorkhispano.com   (915 words)

  
 robiniapseudo.html
The genus robinia is named for Jean Robin (1550-1629) and his son Vespasian Robin (1579-1662), herbalists to kings of France and first to cultivate locust in Europe.
Black Locust is native to the Appalachian Mountains from Pennsylvania to northern Georgia and Alabama and to the Ozark Mountains of southern Missouri, Arkansas and eastern Oklahoma.
The sapwood of Black Locust is a creamy white, while the heartwood varies from a greenish yellow to dark brown.
www.blacklocust.org /blidata/locust/robiniapseudo.html   (462 words)

  
  Mexican Spotted Owls and Fire - Literature Review
Mexican spotted owls typically nest and roost in structurally-complex, diverse forests with a variety of age- and/or size-classes, a component of large trees, often with many snags and down logs and relatively high basal areas and canopy closures (Ganey et al.
Mexican spotted owls generally nest in trees, although in the northern part of their range (southern Utah and Colorado) they often nest in caves or cliff ledges in canyons, and seem to prefer shady habitat with steep cliffs and rocky terrain (Willey 1998; Rinkevich et al.
Mexican spotted owls appear to be influenced more by the total prey biomass available than by the abundance of any particular species, with the possible exception of a potential positive association with deer mouse abundance in one geographic area.
www.jennessent.com /Literature/Thesis/literature_review.htm   (4460 words)

  
 Species:
New Mexico locust is an understory dominant or codominant with Gambel oak (Quercus gambelii) under spruce-fir (Picea engelmannii-Abies lasiocarpa), white fir (A. concolor), and mixed-conifer forests [1,16,20,24,37,40].
New Mexico locust is eaten by mule deer, bighorn sheep, Gambel's quail, chipmunk, and porcupine [56].
New Mexico locust occurs on a wide variety of soils, ranging from clays to sandy loams derived from volcanic or limestone parent materials [5,8,12,23,31].
www.fs.fed.us /database/feis/plants/tree/robneo/all.html   (3176 words)

  
 Black Locust
Distribution: Black locust is native to the Appalachian Mountains from Pennsylvania to northern Georgia and Alabama and to the Ozark Mountains of southern Missouri, Arkansas and eastern Oklahoma.
General Wood Characteristics: The sapwood of fl locust is a creamy white, while the heartwood varies from a greenish yellow to dark brown.
Black locust is very strong in bending and is one of the hardest woods in America.
www.windsorplywood.com /nam_hardwoods/black_locust.html   (550 words)

  
 Phoenix - Music Reviews
Although fans of his multiplatinum vehicles Tool and A Perfect Circle like to paint him as an arcane, poetry-drunk, Jim Morrison-esque frontman, Maynard James Keenan is one puerile sonofabitch at...
Chicago-based DJ Felix Da Housecat takes a journey back to disco with his new release, navigating through sonic textures from that bygone era.
Scott Johnson's new release is a fusion of all that is local.
music.phoenixnewtimes.com /search/music_reviews.php   (305 words)

  
 New Mexican Locust (Robinia neomexicana) - Utah State University Forestry Extension
New Mexican Locust (Robinia neomexicana) - Utah State University Forestry Extension
Landscape Use: Seldom used but could be used more, especially in naturalized landscapes and tough situations.
Very drought tolerant and able to withstand tough conditions, though susceptible to locust borer damage.
extension.usu.edu /forestry/UtahForests/TreeID/rone.htm   (222 words)

  
 Master: Acacia
The various trees and shrubs of the genus Robinia, pea family, Leguminosae, are known as locusts.
The most important tree species is the fl locust, R. pseudoacacia, or false acacia, which is native to the eastern and central United States but has been naturalized in parts of Europe and Asia.
Other species include the clammy locust, R. viscosa, and the New Mexican locust, R. neomexicana.
cr.middlebury.edu /public/russian/Bulgakov/public_html/akacia.html   (101 words)

  
 Arizona - Nature Conservancy Offers Opportunities to View Seasonal Wildflowers
In early April, the small white flowers of the native chokecherry attract bees and flies whose pollen-transferring visits will result in sweet summer cherries favored by birds and fl bear.
New Mexican locust produce pink clusters of flowers in May. Large carpenter bees are its main pollinators, but the flowers are also visited by hummingbirds whose long bills and tongues are able to access the nectar without picking up any pollen, making them nectar "thieves."
Abundant white clusters of blossoms adorn Mexican elderberry trees and are soon followed by succulent elderberry fruits that provide food for many birds.
nature.org /wherewework/northamerica/states/arizona/press/press993.html   (871 words)

  
 Robinia pseudoacacia english
Black Locust is native to the Appalachian Mountains from Pennsylvania to northern Georgia and Alabama and to the Ozark Mountains of southern Missouri, Arkansas and eastern Oklahoma.
Black Locust reaches heights of 100 feet, with a diameter of 3 feet.
The sapwood of Black Locust is a creamy white, while the heartwood varies from a greenish yellow to dark brown.
www2.fpl.fs.fed.us /TechSheets/HardwoodNA/htmlDocs/robiniapseudo.html   (466 words)

  
 Printer friendly version
On a two-hour, slow meander up the canyon almost any time of year, one will not be disappointed with the variety.
Look for the patrolling silver spotted skipper, rather glamorous for its ilk, with a prize white wing splotchy, lighting on a rare and sweet New Mexican locust.
Another is the mourning cloak, stunning maroon with broad yellow borders and patches of velvety blue.
www.tucsoncitizen.com /print/outdoors/060105cx_out_butterflies   (650 words)

  
 Edward Abbey
The Apaches who gave the name to this water and this canyon are not around anymore.
Most of that particular band - unarmed old men, women, children - huddled in a cave near the mouth of Aravaipa Canyon, were exterminated in the l880s by a death squad of American pioneers, aided by Mexican and Papagos, from the nearby city of Tucson.
The walls of Aravaipa Canyon bristle with spiky rock gardens of formidable desert vegetation.
www.unique-design.net /library/nature/abbey.html   (2793 words)

  
 Pine Habitat
New Mexican locust is often another understory species.
Ponderosa pine with intermingled groups of aspen: This type is found mostly on the west and north sides of the San Francisco Peaks, and is generally found in mesic or moist conditions.
Nest trees were taller, had smaller live crown ratios, tended to be part of a clump of trees with interlocking crowns, and were on the lower third of a slope.
www.mirror-pole.com /apif_web/pine/pinehab.htm   (5392 words)

  
 What's New : alanformstone.com
I always (well amost always !) make a note here when I add something new to the site, though for frequently updated pages such as 'The Scuba FAQ', 'News About Karin' and 'Puerto Aventuras News', it's better to bookmark those pages directly.
Karin spent the day meeting new friends at the local school while Liliana heads out to snorkel with the famous whale sharks.
With the ever increasing traffic on the site, interested in baby showers, we thought we would expand the whole baby thing, and so two new pages are published to make it easier to get around the baby things content.
alanformstone.com /whats_new/whats_new.html   (505 words)

  
 New Mexican Disaster Squad, MP3 Album Music Download at eMusic
On their full-length debut, the Florida-based quartet, New Mexican Disaster Squad, who had previously split an EP with Destination: Daybreak, kick out the hardcore jams like they were recording for Dischord in 1981.
Their lyrical stance is best exemplified by the vaguely Queers-like "(If You Don't Have Anything Mean to Say) Don't Say It at All," with the pointed yet funny "Fuck the Oscars" exploring a wittier, more sarcastic side to a style of music not always known for its yuks.
New Mexican Disaster Squad don't particularly add much to the style, but in a scene where pop-punk and screamo is causing many bands not to look beyond the early '90s for their cultural touchstones, their unfashionable devotion to one of the root forms of punk is heartening.
www.emusic.com /album/10794/10794761.html   (301 words)

  
 Taxonomy Overview
In the table, also note that some common names start with a capital (New Mexican locust), and others do not (bigtooth maple).
However, when the common name is based on a proper noun (i.e., the name of a well-recognized person or place) it starts with a capital.
For example, "New Mexican" is capitalized in “New Mexican locust” because it is named after a U.S. state.
www2.for.nau.edu /courses/for212/taxonomy.htm   (1787 words)

  
 Surviving in the Desert | John Annerino
Once when I was living in Mexican Baja, one of the bastards crept into my shoe one night, thinking it was the Adidas Hotel.
They cut them in half, smeared one on the wound, had me suck on the other, and within a few minutes, I was able to stop weeping long enough to drive home, by which time my foot returned to its normal ugly self.
There are, too, three poisonous lizards: the reticulate Gila monster, the banded Gila monster, and the Mexican beaded lizard.
www.ralphmag.org /BC/desert-survival.html   (665 words)

  
 Butterflies and Skippers of North America - Erynnis funeralis
Caterpillars feed on leaves and rest in shelters of rolled or tied leaves.
Caterpillar hosts: Various legumes including New Mexican locust (Robinia neomexicana), bur clover (Medicago hispida), deerweed (Lotus scoparius), desert ironwood (Olneya tesota), and vetch (Vicia species).
Range: Southern California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas south to Argentina.
www.nearctica.com /butter/plate25/Efunera.htm   (150 words)

  
 Grand Canyon National Park - Areaparks.com
Some of the tree species include the white fir, Engleman spruce, blue spruce, Douglas fir, corkbark fir, ponderosa pine, Utah juniper, alligator juniper, Colorado pinyon, quaking aspen, Fremont cottonwood, Gambel oak, and Arizona walnut.
Some of the shrub species have compound leaves and they include creeping barberry, fernbush, honey mesquite, catclaw acacia, creosote bush, boxelder, and New Mexican locust.
Shrub species with simple and alternating leaves are the chokeberry, big sagebrush, seep willow, birchleaf buckthorn, netleaf hackberry, Utah serviceberry, and desert bricklebrush.
grandcanyon.areaparks.com /parkinfo.html?pid=3915   (156 words)

  
 Herb Growing page 3
Locust, aka Mexican Locust, New Mexican Locust, New Mexican Robinia, New Mexico Locust, Southwestern Locust, Thorny Locust, and Western Locust
Mints New Zealand Institute for Crop and Food Research
Oregano at Green Chronicle UK Oregano New Zealand Institute for Crop and Food Research
globalcircle.net /mh/herbgrowing3.htm   (893 words)

  
 Panchito's Mexican Restaurant - New York, NY - DineSite.com
Panchito's is less about its fairly conventional Tex-Mex food (cheesy nachos and burritos galore) than it is about its cocktails, which it takes more than seriously with over one hundred different varieties of frozen margaritas, daiquiris, and pina coladas.
This restaurant, complete with folk art, stained glass window, dark bar lighting, and live jazz piano, is a good place to unwind with friends or coworkers at the end of the week -- or at the end of a long night since Panchito's stays open until 4:00 a.m.
Expect the average entrée to cost for the most part in the range of $8 to $12.
cuisinenet.com /info/rstrnt-95324??&t=0   (170 words)

  
 [Arid_gardener] what is this tree or shrub?   (Site not responding. Last check: )
>From the picture, this looks similar to a New Mexican Locust (Robinia neomexicana).
Look closely at the leaves --- are they divided into numerous hairy leaflets on a stout fuzzy brown stem?
At the stem base there would be two sharp, stout reddish thorns if it is locust.
ag.arizona.edu /pipermail/arid_gardener/2005-June/002527.html   (145 words)

  
 Punknews.org | Submit News
Orange - Escape from L.A. Mayday Parade - A Lesson in Romantics
2007 CMJ Music Marathon - live in New York
Last thing; we like to give credit to sources, so if you got this news from another
www.punknews.org /submit   (140 words)

  
 Geology
Forest Lakes is located in a Ponderosa Pine forest that stretches from the town of Williams east along the Mogollon Plateau into New Mexico.
Other plants of interest include stands of the spiny New Mexican Locust, usually found as shrubs but sometimes of tree size, and large Willows in the riparian canyon bottoms.
People who know where to look also find raspberries for the picking in September.
www.floa.org /flora_fauna.htm   (1137 words)

  
 Seeds for growing Douglas Fir trees Planetrees Sycamores Angelgrove Seeds
Seeds for growing Planetrees, Epaulette Tree, Douglas Fir, Pomegranate, Locust Trees.
Foliage (needles) colour can range from blue green to dark green or yellow green foliage.
The New Mexico Locust is a rare spiny shrub or small tree that can grow to heights of 20 ft or more especially if trained/shaped to a single trunk.
www.trees-seeds.com /Locust_tree_seeds.html   (226 words)

  
 Know your Habitat, Transitional Life Zone--Tucson Audubon Society
Upon relocating here to the Sonoran Desert, like many of us I fell in love with the desert and all its varied life forms—so different yet so easy to see.
But while it was nice encountering all these new plants and animals, it was comforting to have access to forests of large trees, sort of a nice respite to remember one’s roots.
Older stands can have extensive litter on the forest floor preventing undergrowth; but in areas of younger trees, buckbrush, boxleaf myrtle, Arizona rose, and New Mexican locust are found in the understory.
www.tucsonaudubon.org /birding/know07.htm   (752 words)

  
 Flora & Fauna   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Stands of tall ponderosas grow between elevations of 7,000 and 8,000 feet on both rims.
Mature forests tend to be open, allowing in sunlight for Gambel oak, New Mexican locust, mountain mahogany, greenleaf manzanita, cliffrose, wildflowers, and grasses.
Animals and birds found here include most of those resident in the spruce-fir forests.
www.arizonahandbook.com /GC_flora.htm   (813 words)

  
 [No title]
The Tree: Black Locust reaches heights of 100 feet, with a diameter of 3 feet.
General: The sapwood of Black Locust is a creamy white, while the heartwood varies from a greenish yellow to dark brown.
Walter deGruyter & Co., Berlin, Germany; New York, NY.
www2.fpl.fs.fed.us /TechSheets/HardwoodNA/roughhtmlDocs/robini1.html   (549 words)

  
 Birding the Kaibab Plateau, Arizona
Bear right and follow 610 toward Saddle Mountain.
This road, like many on the plateau, is lined with New Mexican Locust, a large shrub that produces beautiful bright-pink blossoms in early summer.
Continue on 610 for 6.9 miles to a sign on the left that points to Marble Viewpoint (FR 219).
www.maricopaaudubon.org /birding_locations/kaibab.htm   (1746 words)

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