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Foliage
Form/habitat
Fruit
| Texas Mimosa, Texas Catclaw, Wherry Mimosa
Mimosa texana (M. wherryana, M. biuncifera var. lindheimeri)
Fabaceae (Leguminosae)
Texas mimosa is an infrequent or quite rare inhabitant on caliche or gravel hillsides in Zapata and Starr counties in south Texas and Mexico. It is a rounded, densely-branched, prickly shrub having slender, zigzag twigs, grey to dark brown or black, small, recurved single prickles and twice pinnately compound alternate leaves. The eye-catching, brick red-colored seed pods also have sharp prickles on the margins. In bloom its pretty creamy white flowers transform the desertic shrub into an intensely fragrant, gorgeous ornamental plant, worthy of cultivation in Texas' warmest zone.
Plant Habit or Use: small shrub medium shrub
Exposure: sun
Flower Color: white, yellow, creamy white, creamy yellow
Blooming Period: spring summer
Fruit Characteristics: legume
Height: 3 1/2 to 7 feet
Width: 4 feet
Plant Character: deciduous
Heat Tolerance: very high
Water Requirements:
Soil Requirements: alkaline
USDA Hardiness Zone: 9
Additional Comments: Mimosa texana has also been applied to M. borealis. Also, M. texana has long been confused with M. aculeaticarpa because of close similarities of superficial features.
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