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Bamboo Species
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Promoting the Beauty and Utility of Bamboo

 

Note: the heading for each table contains a link to additional information. The Sources links will take you to the contact information for the growers who usually, or sometimes, carry that species.

Ochlandra
Oligostachyum
Olmeca
Otatea
Oxytenanthera


 

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Comments - Description Sources
OCHLANDRA A group of shrubby gregarious reed-like bamboos, native to southern India and Sri Lanka, with persistent culm-sheaths.
O. stridula
REED BAMBOO
18 0.8 0 5 Native to Sri Lanka, where it is used extensively for basketry and for paper pulp. Good for craft work. May be misidentified Semiarundinaria species. C6 D1 D3
6 2 -18  
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OLIGOSTACHYUM A group of small to medium running bamboos from the coast of China, similar to Semiarundinaria. Swollen nodes.
O. glabrescens
6 0.4     From Fujian and Zhejiang, China. Long narrow leaves.  
2 1    
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OLMECA A Mexican genus, with two species. Both species have large fleshy fruits, and rhizomes with long necks, very open clumps.
O. recta
45 2   4 Green culms; nodes subdued on main culm but bulge on branches. Branches at about 10 ft; looks like a palm. Fruits to one inch diameter.  
14 5.1    
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OTATEA Genus of American clumping bamboos with 3 known species. From central Mexico to Central America.
O. acuminata 'Michoacan'
15 1 28 5 Coarser, with burgundy culm tips, darker culms, more persistant culms sheath and a stiffer look to the leaves. C6 D3 K2 M3
5 2.5 -2  
O. acuminata ssp. acuminata
15 0.7 28 5 Smaller and more delicate looking then aztecorum, it comes from the hot, humid lowlands of eastern Mexico. B2 C6 C8 D1 D3 D4 K2 L0 M3 M5
5 1.8 -2  
O. acuminata ssp. aztecorum
MEXICAN WEEPING
20 1.5 22 4 The long narrow leaves are produced in such abundance that they almost completely obscure the culms. Clumps open with culms spaced up to 1 or 2 feet. A1 A6 B2 B8 B9 C2 C4 C6 D1 D3 E5 E7 F1 F7 F9 G3 G6 G9 H3 H4 H8 H9 I9 J7 K1 K2 K4 K5 K7 K9 L7 M0 M1 M3 M5 M9 N0
6 3.8 -6  
O. acuminata ssp. aztecorum 'Dwarf'
DWARF MEXICAN WEEPING
4 0.7 22 4 A dwarf form of the above. Looks like a basketball. C6 D4 K2 K5
1 1.8 -6  
O. fimbriata
14 0.7 24 4 Leaves up to a foot long and 3/4 inch wide, waxy whitish culms, from Mexico to northern Colombia. C6 D3 G3 K1 K5 M3
4 1.8 -4  
O. glauca 'Mayan Silver'
    22   Previously known as O. acuminata 'Mayan Silver'. From Chiapas, Mexico, with hollow culms covered in silver-white waxy powder. Leaves weeping and narrow. A4 B3 B8 C6 D1 D3 D4 E5 F1 F9 K2 K3 K4 K5 K9 M3 M5
    -6  
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Comments - Description Sources
OXYTENANTHERA Clumping bamboos from the savanna woodlands of tropical Africa.
O. abyssinica
30 4 30 5 Native to Ethiopia. Bright green, no thorns. Zigzag culms. K4 M5
9 10.2 -1  
O. braunii
WINE BAMBOO
30 4 30 5 May be the same species as O. abyssinica. Young shoots are cut off to produce sap that is fermented for wine in Tanzania. G6
9 10.2 -1  

 


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This page was last modified on Sunday, 2008-05-11 12:48