Yucatan's leading tourist guide to Merida, Campeche, Valladolid, Izamal and the Yucatan, Mexico   Yucatan's leading tourist guide to Merida, Campeche, Valladolid, Izamal and the Yucatan, Mexico
Yucatan's leading tourist guide to Merida, Campeche, Valladolid, Izamal and the Yucatan, Mexico Yucatan's leading tourist guide to Merida, Campeche, Valladolid, Izamal and the Yucatan, Mexico
Yucatan's leading tourist guide to Merida, Campeche, Valladolid, Izamal and the Yucatan, Mexico Yucatan's leading tourist guide to Merida, Campeche, Valladolid, Izamal and the Yucatan, Mexico
 


Vegetation of the Yucatan

From the coast of the Gulf of Mexico, through the mangrove swamps, to the scrub of the interior, Yucatan presents a variety of ecological niches. The vegetation of the state is as varied as our ecology, creating wildlife habitats, and sources of food and medicine for the native people.

Dune plants of the coast form an underground network of roots that help prevent erosion by the surf.  Saw palmetto, sea grape, yucca cactus, prickly pear, (tunas), sea oats, and beach morning glory all help stabilise the sand, and were all food and herbal medicine sources for the Mayans.

The mangrove swamps that grow in Yucatan’s coastal wetlands serve as natural water filters and also create an important environment for wildlife.Two mangrove species predominate: Red Mangrove and Black Mangrove. Red Mangroves form the distinctive branching prop roots that make a home for numerous aquatic animals, and are integral in catching sediment which will eventually build up new land. Black Mangroves use vertical root projections to capture oxygen. Of great ecological importance, many efforts are being made in Yucatan to preserve these ecological niches, by creating conservation areas and promoting eco-tourism.

The scrubby arid interior of Yucatan is host to many exotic plants, such as orchids and bromeliads. More than 300 varieties of orchids grow wild here, usually found anchored to tree branches. The incredibly beautiful flowers are protected, however, and should not be collected from the wild. Bromeliads are remarkably tolerant and adaptable plants.

 



 

 


They can be found from our seashores to the driest parts of the interior. Uniquely adapted to adverse conditions,  they have scales on their leaves which are moisture absorbing organs that pull water out of the air.

Henequen, a native agave plant, bécame the most important cash crop of the Yucatan in the early 1800’s - indeed, at one point, Yucatan was producing the 90% of the rope and burlap bags in the world. Originally used by the Mayans for ropes, cables, nets, lassos, curtains, hammocks and dense fabrics, the Spanish also found had many uses for the fiber, including ship cables and grain sacks. It becane most popular, however, when it was discovered that the baling wire used for cow feed in the United States was harming cattle. The organic sisal, however, would not.
Some haciendas, surrounded by a sea of spiky blue-green plants, are still in production today, as natural fibers are becoming more and more popular.

Coconut Palms grow naturally along the Yucatan peninsula's beaches, but after the infestation of a disease known as lethal yellowing from the 1970’s through the 1990’s, the majority of groves today have been planted manually. Thriving on sandy soils, abundant sunlight, and regular rainfall, coconut palms are highly tolerant of salinity. All parts of the coconut palm are useful: the meat is used as food, coconut water provides sugar, nutrients, and electrolytes, the fiber from the husk is used to make ropes, mats, and brushes, the leaves provide materials for baskets and roofing, and palmwood from the trunk is being used as a substitute for endangered hardwoods.

Anthropological Museum
Archaeology
Art in the Yucatan:
     Art Festival
     Art Galleries
     Art Gallery La Luz
      Casa de los Artistas
      Castro Pacheco Murals
      Izamal Cultural Center
      Katrin Schikora
      MACAY Museum
      Made in the Yucatan
      Mayan Arts Today
      Meridas City Museum
      Museums
     Pottery & Ceramics of Ticul
      Sculpture in Merida
      Sculpture on Paseo Montejo
Ask the U.S. Consul
Bicycle Route on Sundays
Bird Watching
Bullfight
 Cabañuelas
 Calesas
 Calle 60 Stroll
Cuisine in the Yucatan:
      Bananas of the Yucatan
      Botanas
      Campechan Cuisine
      Chiles en Nogada
      Cocina Economica
      Cooking School
      Food Bank
      Margaritas
      Restaurants
      Seafood
      Tequila
      Yucatecan Cook Books
      Yucatecan Cuisine
 Christmas in the Yucatan
 Duck hunting
 Ecological Tourist
 Ecotourism Network
 Flamingos
 Folkloric Ballet
 From our Readers
 Gremios
 Haciendas:
 
    Haciendas of the Yucatan
      Haciendas Foundation - Arts
      Haciendas Foundation -                Herbs
      Hacienda Hotels
 Hammocks
 Handcrafts
 Healthcare:
      Healthcare in Merida
      Medical Tourism: Star                  Medica
 Henequen, green gold
 Hurricanes
 Marriage Requirements
 Mayan Culture:
      Mayan Beliefs
      Mayan Ceremonial Site
      Mayan Life
 Merida:
      Merida Corners
      Merida English Library
      Meridas of the World
      Consulates
     
 Nightlife
      Restaurants
      What to do in Merida
 New 7 Wonders of the World
 Photography
 Planetarium
 Save Water
 Spanish:
      Language Schools
      Life Long Learning
      Say it in Spanish
      Yucatecan Spanish
 Sustainable Tourism
 Teatro Indigena
 Temascal
 Torch Runners
 Who's on the money?
 Yucatan:
      Moving to the Yucatan
      Yucatan Retirement
      Yucatan Name
      Yucatan's Vegetation
      Yucatan's Watercolors



 


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