Donate online to help support Botany Photo of the Day

Subscribe to BPotD

Type your email address below!

BPotD Around the World!

Locations of visitors to this page

Botany Photo of the Day
In science, beauty. In beauty, science. Daily.

Hechtia texensis

Hechtia texensis
Hechtia texensis

I was happy to find some images that reminded me of fireworks to start the New Year. Big thanks to Jim, aka J.G. in S.F.@Flickr of San Francisco, California for today's photographs (original image 1 | original image 2 | BPotD Flickr Pool). Given that this is also a season of colds, I'm also amused to voice the word Hechtia with an overemphasized Germanic pronunciation (I amuse easily), though I note some places suggest the pronunciation is instead heck' tya. I think the former is more correct, though (perhaps without the overemphasis), as the genus is named after Julius Gottfried Conrad Hecht, a 19th century German counselor to the King of Prussia. When scientific names are based on a person's name, my understanding is that the correct pronunciation reflects the way one would say the person's name.

The epithet texensis reveals part of the distribution of this species. Found in southwest Texas and south into northern Mexico, Texas false agave is one of five species in the genus Hechtia that extend beyond Mexico's borders (the other 45 or so are endemic to Mexico). A close relative, Hechtia glomerata, is the only other species found north of the USA-Mexico border, though it is widespread and its range extends outside of Mexico into Central America.

Hechtia texensis is a terrestrial bromeliad, forming a caudex to aid in its survival within dry, limestone, rocky habitats. For additional photographs, see Hechtia texensis from the Texas Native Plants Database and the USDA PLANTS database: Hechtia texensis (the latter has a good shot of a plant in habitat). For a scientific description, see the Flora of North America account: Hechtia texensis.

Photography resource link: The photography of the UK-born Swedish photographer Struan Gray might intrigue some of you (I particularly like his Tanglings set). Struan also has a weblog, Twiglog, though the last entry was in June.

25 Comments

Betsy Ann Baker commented:

WOW! I would have been happy for anything from BPotD, but this! Glad you're back,my thanks and happy New Year.

Nancy commented:

Looks like a dyckia to me. Very cool pics. These are the dickens to divide.

Mary Ann, in Toronto commented:

Wonderful plant photo, and great photography link -- Thank you, and Happy New Year.

Eric in SF commented:

Daniel - tell your pronunciation rule to fans of the genus Fuchsia! *grin*

annie Morgan commented:

So glad to have you back, and what a wonderful New Year photo! You're so clever.

Daniel Mosquin commented:

Yes, I think it would be a hard sell: Fuchsia Pronunciation.

Quin commented:

hopeful new year! what a way to return - thanks!!! a little other wordly......

Daniel commented:

very beautiful!

Terri Shane commented:

Wow! F*A*B*U*L*O*U*S !

Keith commented:

Thank you Daniel, and Happy New Year! That is,
新年快乐!

elizabeth a airhart commented:

happy to have you back daniel

gaudeamus igitur 2010 here we are

handsome photos the links quite good

check out the new copy of audubon
special issue photo awards issue
really great photos for you to see

the 5th being th un start of bio day birds day
i think you wrote you would be takeing part?
in the year ahead bon bon daniel

Linda Allan commented:

Wonderful photography! All the very best for
2010.

Mandy Macdonald commented:

A beautiful plant, and such a contrast to our exceptionally snowbound landscapes in Scotland just now. Thanks and HNY!

Irma commented:

A very Happy New Year to you and a million thanks for your efforts to cheer all of us up with the very interesting and sometime very funny pictures and comments.

marjorie lacy commented:

Happy New Year to all Plant people.

Susanne commented:

As a German, I have to say: WHAT'S THE PROBLEM?? :):)
I usually break my tongue trying to pronounce a clearly German word the American way.......
and of course the picture is gorgeous, though it still doesn't quite make up for the lack of fireworks in my neck of the woods.

Joyce commented:

Happy New Year! ^-^

SoapySophia commented:

Awesome! Very fireworks like!

lisa commented:

I love the succulent bromeliads! They do have nasty spikes though, and are painful to work with. This one is gorgeous. Welcome back Daniel! Thank you for the beautiful picture. It brightens up the winter gloom.

Kasey commented:

Bless you & Gesundheit!!

Carolina commented:

Great pictures! Have a happy new year, and to all following here too :)

Christie commented:

Hooray for BPOTD!!! Happy new year!

MercyJoy commented:

Gorgeous! Looks like little fireworks. They would be fun to paint:*)

Hope everyone had a wonderful Christmas and New Years!

(2010 already. Wow!)

Susan Hall commented:

Perfect for the New Year. Welcome back, really been missing your terrific posts. Thanks for spoiling us.

Wendy Cutler commented:

I'd already made that photo a favourite from the pool. I hadn't connected it with the new year, but the blast did knock my socks off.

Thanks too for the link to Struan Gray's site. His writing on the Sand Boils page has a lot to think about. Funny juxtaposition in moods though, the day's photo and Struan's photos.

Leave a comment

Please share your comments about the photograph(s) and accompanying write-up. Telling a story about the subject of the photograph(s) is also much appreciated! If you have a gardening question, the best place to ask is on the UBC Botanical Garden Forums. Thank you!

" name="comments_form" id="comments-form" onsubmit="if (this.bakecookie.checked) rememberMe(this)">

« Previous entry: Hemitomes congestum | Main | Archives | Next entry: Samanea saman »

a place of mind, The University of British Columbia

 
UBC Botanical Garden and Centre for Plant Research
6804 SW Marine Drive, Vancouver, B.C., V6T 1Z4
Tel: 604.822.3928
Fax: 604.822.2016 Email: botg@interchange.ubc.ca

Emergency Procedures | Accessibility | Contact UBC | © Copyright The University of British Columbia