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bougainvillea

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bougainvillea

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Bougainvillea in Mexico. The flowers are small, and surrounded by large brightly coloured bracts.
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The climbing plant bougainvillea, of the family Nyctaginaceae, is a species native to the American tropical zone, and is renowned for its abundance of bright flowers. Plants such as this one in the Dominican Republic will grow all year round in the warmth and rich, loamy, well-drained soil of these regions. Further north, they need protecting in winter from temperatures under 10°C/50°F.

Any plant of a group of South American tropical vines of the four o'clock family, now cultivated in warm countries around the world for the colourful red and purple bracts (leaflike structures) that cover the flowers. They are named after the French navigator Louis de Bougainville. (Genus Bougainvillea, family Nyctaginaceae.)



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The Valley of the Sun is where bougainvillea blooms, jackrabbits jump, javelinas roam, and towering saguaro cacti are king.
By that time, small green shoots will have sprouted from all viable stems and branches of tropical and subtropical evergreens such as bougainvillea and lantana.
In the midst of palm-tree lined streets, purple bougainvillea and pink hibiscus, 15-plus miles of white-sand beaches, and temperatures that average 75 degrees year-round, 112,000-plus employees run Miami's leisure and hospitality engine.
 
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