Research and Conservation in Southern Sonora, Mexico

Carnegiea gigantea (saguaro [Eng.], sahuaro [Sp.])

Nearly all of the arborescent cacti in North America occur in tropical communities, with some extending their ranges into the Sonoran Desert. In contrast, the saguaro is primarily a Sonoran Desert species; it reaches its greatest size and density there. It is the most cold tolerant of the arborescent cacti and ranges much farther north than any other.


Giant saguaro in Arizona Upland Sonoran Desert, Ironwood Forest National Monument, AZ. Photo: Mark Dimmitt

Dense population of saguaros in Arizona Upland Sonoran Desert, Ironwood Forest National Monument, AZ. Photo: Mark Dimmitt

The range of saguaro extends southward into thornscrub until it apparently cannot compete with the dense vegetation. One of the southernmost populations is on Cerro Prieto a few miles east of Navojoa, Sonora on the road to Alamos. Here they mix with Stenocereus thurberi and Pachycereus pecten-aboriginum. There is one known more southerly population just across the state border in Sinaloa.


Saguaros in foothills thornscrub near Cucurpe, Sonora. Photo: Mark Dimmitt

Saguaros near the southern limit of their range in foothills thornscrub east of Navojoa, Sonora. Photo:Mark Dimmitt

 

Flowers and fruits of Carnegiea gigantea. Photos: Mark Dimmitt

 


Retrieved from the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum web site on 11-21-2024
http://desertmuseum.org/programs/alamos_succs_cargig.php