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bromeliad

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bromeliad

Any tropical or subtropical plant belonging to the pineapple family, usually with stiff leathery leaves, which are often coloured and patterned, and bright, attractive flower spikes. There are about 1,400 species in tropical America; several are cultivated as greenhouse plants. (Family Bromeliaceae.)

Some grow in habitats ranging from scrub desert to tropical forest floor. Many, however, grow on rainforest trees. These are epiphytes: they are supported by the tree but do not take nourishment from it, using rain and decayed plant and animal remains for independent sustenance.

The pineapple plant (Ananas comosus) is widely cultivated for its fleshy collective fruit, resembling a pine cone, developed from a flower spike. Spanish moss (Tillandsia usneoides), another bromeliad, grows in long strands from the branches of trees in the southeastern US and tropical America.


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This weekend's Los Angeles Cactus and Succulent Society and San Fernando Valley Bromeliad Show and Sale offers the perfect opportunity to see and learn about the many different species.
Those like Bromeliad or Lady Slipper Orchid should be watered once weekly and a Caladium every three days during the summer.
As he moves slowly and deliberately up and down his tree, the sloth comes upon fascinating plants and animals: the algae and moths that live in his fur, the bromeliad directly above him, the poison-dart frog following him down the tree trunk.
 
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