Celtis tala (or Celtis ehrenbergiana), known as tala,[1] is a medium size deciduous tree, native to tropical and subtropical South America. With small to medium-sized spines, its one of the main components of the Gran Chaco prairies and certain areas of the Argentinian pampa.
^"Celtis tala". Germplasm Resources Information Network. Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture. Retrieved 16 January 2018.
Celtistala (or Celtis ehrenbergiana), known as tala, is a medium size deciduous tree, native to tropical and subtropical South America. With small to...
currency of Samoa Celtistala, or tala, a deciduous tree in South America Təla (Tala), the seventh month of the Afghan calendar Tala language, a Chadic...
Celtis ehrenbergiana, called the desert hackberry or spiny hackberry, is a plant species that has long been called C. pallida by many authors, including...
espinal the main tree species include Prosopis nigra, Prosopis alba, Celtistala, Geoffroea decorticans, Vachellia caven, Jodina rhombifolia, Scutia buxifolia...
San Jose, Flores, Florida, Lavalleja and Soriano. In the prairies "Tala" (Celtistala), "Molle rastrero" (Schinus longifolius), "Espina amarilla" (Berberis...
mythology, and saurus ("lizard"). Celtis iguanaea hackberry Taíno From iguana, ultimately from Taino iwana Celtistala hackberry Aymara/Quechua From tara...