Ceiba Casearia

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Plant Characteristics
Origin: ?
Cultivation
Exposure: ?"?" is not in the list (sun, part-sun, shade, unknown) of allowed values for the "Exposure" property.
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Scientific Names



Read about Ceiba Casearia in the Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture 

Ceiba Casearia, Medic. (C. pentandra, Gaertn. Bombax pentandrum, Linn. B. guineense, Schum. & Thoun. Eriodendron anfractuosum, DC. E. occidentale, Don. E. orientale, Kostel. Xylon pentandrum, O. Kunze.). Silk-cotton Tree. Ceiba. Pochote. Figs. 852, 853. Great tree, reaching 100 ft. and more, and having immense horizontal far-spreading branches and wide-flung thin buttresses or flanges: trunk spiny when young; branches verticillate: lfts. 7, arising from a nearly circular plate or disk at the top of the petiole, lanceolate-acuminate, undulate, smooth, each 4-6 in. long: fls. white or rose, the corolla 2-3 in. long; petals oblong-obtuse, hairy outside: caps. 4-8 in. long, 5-valved, bearing many woolly seeds. Tropics of Asia, Afr., and Amer. B.M. 3360.—One of the characteristic and well-known trees of tropical countries. The wings of some of the old trees run far in all directions, sometimes being prominent 30 ft. or more; note the picture (Fig. 852) of the well-known tree at Nassau on the island of New Providence. The wood is used to some extent in interior construction, but is soft, white and brittle. The cotton-like material in the pods is used in beds and pillows and for stuffinglife-buoys,butit cannot be spun into threads; it is the "kapok" of commerce. Offered in S. Calif, and Fla., as a tree of rapid growth. CH


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