Yucca gigantea

Yucca gigantea

''Yucca gigantea'' is a species of flowering plant in the asparagus family, native to Mexico and Central America. Growing up to 8–12 m in height, it is an evergreen shrub which is widely cultivated as an ornamental garden or house plant often being called just yucca cane.
Yucca composition Native to Mexico and Central America and enjoying the similar climate here in Australia. 

The two Yucca gigantea that I grow are currently around 4 metres in height after 15 years. They are insanely hardy. Living on a coastal cliff as I do, they are battered regularly by high winds and salt laden air and don't seem to be bothered one bit! 

Pictured here is one of the pendant flowers, white/cream in colour produced in summer time, together with the sword shaped, elegant green leaves. 
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Appearance

''Yucca gigantea'' is usually less than 6 m in height. It may have a thick, single trunk or be multitrunked resulting from a thickened, inflated, trunk-like lower base similar to an elephant's foot. The exceptionally narrow leaves fan out in clumps. They are strap-like, spineless and up to 1.2 m in length. White flowers are produced in the summer. Mature plants produce erect spikes of pendent flowers up to 1 m in length. Flowers are followed by brown, fleshy fruits which are oval and up to 2.5 cm long.

Naming

Common names include spineless yucca, soft-tip yucca, blue-stem yucca, giant yucca, yucca cane, and itabo. Its flower, the ''izote'', is the national flower of El Salvador.

Distribution

''Yucca gigantea'' is found natively in Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and the eastern part of Mexico .

It is also reportedly naturalized in Puerto Rico, the Leeward Islands and Ecuador.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionAngiosperms
ClassMonocots
OrderAsparagales
FamilyAsparagaceae
GenusYucca
SpeciesY. gigantea
Photographed in
Australia