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Salsola oppositifolia Desf.

S. longifolia auct., S. verticillata auct.

Spa.: Zagua, salado negro.   Fre.: Soude à longues feuilles.   Ara.: Semmumed, al asla, smumel, tasra, azil.   Tam.: Tarmut.

Evergreen shrub, hermaphrodite, ± upright, up to 4 m in height (usually 0.8-2 m), very ramose from the base. Trunk and main branches with white bark, fissured longitudinally on older specimens. Glabrescent plant in all its parts. Branches, branchlets and leaves opposite. Branchlets greenish-white, younger branchlets sometimes reddish. Its main feature —which gives it its name— are opposite leaves (1-3 cm long), sessile, linear, trigonous, acute, slightly recurved backwards, fleshy, dark green in colour, or ± ashy due to the waxy powder that covers them. Flowers all hermaphrodite, solitary in the leaf axil, in spiciform inflorescences arranged in panicles. Perianth with 5 membranous parts and 5 stamens. Fruit perianth with large and showy wings, first whitish-green and later turning from pink to red (20-30 mm in diameter).

Flowering:

April to October.

 

Fruiting:

In autumn.

Habitat:

On all types of terrain, including rocky and sandy, always somewhat saline, in coastal and inland areas. Semiarid to dry bioclimate.

Distribution:

Southern Spain and Italy, Balearic Islands and Sicily. It appears in North Africa widely distributed scattered in areas of Mediterranean influence, especially in islands and coastal areas, reaching towards the E to Egypt, Sinai Peninsula, Arabian Peninsula and Palestine.

Conservation status:

It is a common species and in principle it is not considered threatened. Currently, it has not been assessed at a global level in the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.

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