Cork oaks and tajibos in bloom, a beauty at the end of winter | Alcornoques y tajibos en flor, una belleza al ocaso del invierno

Lourdes Molina Rea, El Deber:

FOTOS. JORGE GUTIÉRREZ
PHOTOS. JORGE GUTIÉRREZ

They are different species with a common denominator, their ability to reproduce when the number of hours of sunshine are scarce

There are still a few weeks left until the start of spring and the roundabout, mainly the one on the first ring, looks like an art painting. The tajibos and cork oaks are in bloom at the end of winter. The reasons are explained to us by an expert.

Alcornoques y tajibos en flor en Santa Cruz

Cork oaks and tajibos in bloom in Santa Cruz

Alcibiades Angulo, an agronomist by training, but dedicated to botany, reports that there are two kinds of plants, according to their reproductive phase, those with short days and those with long days. 

Alcornoques y tajibos en flor en Santa Cruz

Cork oaks and tajibos in bloom in Santa Cruz

Those with short days are those that bloom in those months where the light is less long. That is to say, it dawns late and it gets dark early. While the others, on the contrary, bloom when it dawns early and it gets dark late,” said the expert.

Likewise, he asserted that now the plants store hours of darkness so that flowering can occur. “That is why these plants flower this season. They are saying goodbye to their flowering, it is estimated that they will last about two more weeks,” Angulo remarked.

Differences

Now, although both the tajibo and the cork oak flower during this season, these specimens are different. How to recognize them?

“Although both are related, they belong to different genera, the cork oak is of the Tabebuia genus and the hairy yellow tajibo is of the Handroanthus genus. They are like close cousins to each other, but they are not the same and there is a marked evolutionary distance,” Angulo stated.

Angulo indicated that the first hallmark is the shape of the blade. The tajibos have a pointed blade; while the cork oak is curved.

Alcornoques y tajibos en flor en Santa Cruz

Cork oaks and tajibos in bloom in Santa Cruz

Another difference is in the flower, in the part of the calyx of the cork oak it does not have trichomes (or hairs); while in the tajibo does.

Alcornoques y tajibos en flor en Santa Cruz

Cork oaks and tajibos in bloom in Santa Cruz

And the most visible is its fruit. The cork oak has a fruit like motacusito, small; while of the tajibo it is large with trichome (hairs). 

Alcornoques y tajibos en flor en Santa Cruz
Alcornoques y tajibos en flor en Santa Cruz
Cork oaks and tajibos in bloom in Santa Cruz

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