Common Names:
English: Screwbean Mesquite
Spanish: Tornillo
O’odham: Kuujul
Family: Fabaceae (pea/legume family) | Synonyms: Leguminosae
Botanical Name: Prosopis pubescens
Rain Garden Zone: P. pubescens thrives in the terrace Rain Garden Zone. It can also grow well in the bottom Rain Garden Zone, provided that the trunk is not subjected to prolonged periods of standing water. The bottom zone is typically the bottom of a basin or swale. This location is prone to temporary pooling of water as well as nighttime cool air pockets. The terrace zone is typically atop a terrace or on the bank of a basin or swale. These sites have more shallow, less-frequent, and more temporary pooling than in bottom zone.
Reproduced with permission from "Rainwater Harvesting for Drylands and Beyond" by Brad Lancaster, HarvestingRainwater.com
Flowering Season: May—August
Harvest Season (Pods):
Harvest Techniques: Harvest mesquite pods before the summer rains. Pods should be picked from the tree rather than from the ground, and pods from particular trees should be taste-tested first for desired characteristics.
Planting Season: Monsoon
Landscape Cultivation: Mesquite should be planted in terrace and bottom rain garden zones. To break through the hard seed coat of the screwbean mesquite, pour boiling water over the seed before planting. Avoid placing trees where the trunk will experience prolonged (>12 hours) standing water.
Characteristics: The screwbean mesquite gets its name from its pods, which have a distinctive coiled shape. P. pubescens is considered a tree or large shrub as it has multiple trunks and can grow to a height of 20 feet (6 m). The bark is light brown and shaggy in appearance due to the separation of fibrous strips of bark.
Ecological Benefits: P. pubescens is a hub for pollinators. Wildlife take advantage of the pods for food, and forests of mesquite that grow along desert rivers provide habitats for birds and mammals.
Practical Uses:
References:
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