|
It is a plant without a stalk, with dark green leaves
forming a rosette. Leaf margins are smooth with a white
line that at the end forms a very sharp point (Figure
no. 1).
Individuals can grow up to one meter in diameter and
60 to 70 cm high. Their reproductive stalk can reach
up to 2 meters of height (Figure no. 2), and is visited
by numerous invertebrates like beetles, ants, bees and
wasps, and bats. After being polinized, flowers transform
into three-cavities capsules that contains the seeds.
After flowering the plant dies.
Populations within the reserve are healthy, as it is
possible to find individuals of all ages, from young
5 cm long (Figure n. 3), to 1 meter in diameter. This
species is found in very steep slopes, in altitudes
higher than 700 meters above sea level, over rocky and
shallow soils with a high exposure to solar rays.
Agave pelona contains a high proportion of water within
its tissues and plays an important role in the ecosystem,
as it is an important component of the desert bighorn
sheeps diet. It is locally called lechuguilla,
and some people obtains vegetable fiber from its leaves
to make several kinds of domestic utensils (brushes,
ropes, etc.); this fiber is commonly known as ixtle
and could be obtained from other agave species as well.
The seeds of this and other desertic species require
particular humidity, temperature and light conditions
that are not easily found in these areas. However, there
are microhabitats like cracks in the rocks or humid
soils under fallen logs that may provide the seed with
the proper conditions to grow and form new individuals.
|