
Seed to Sentinel-Saguaro National Park - Tucson AZ 85743
Posted by:
Don.Morfe
N 32° 15.246 W 111° 11.892
12S E 481330 N 3568618
The marker is located at the visitor center garden in the Tucson Monument District, Saguaro National Park, 2700 North Kinney Road, Tucson AZ 85743.
Waymark Code: WM18WB0
Location: Arizona, United States
Date Posted: 10/07/2023
Views: 1
TEXT ON THE MARKER
"Seed to Sentinel-Saguaro National Park
Standing like desert sentinels, mature saguaros start life as tiny black seeds. These seeds usually germinate under nurse plants but only a few survive to become mature saguaros.
Look for young saguaros growing low to the ground. Those that are about the size of your thumb may be several years old. In contrast, tall saguaros with many branching arms can be 175 or 200 years of age. Known as “ancient giants,” these cacti eventually die, decay, and drop woody, internal skeletons to the ground.
During a walk along any park trail you can discover saguaros in their various stages of life and death.
Reproduction
Saguaro reproduction begins during the hottest and driest weeks of the year—late spring and early summer. This is when white-winged doves, bees, and bats travel to blossoms, transporting pollen, fertilizing as they go. Saguaro fruit usually ripens in late June. Each fruit contains as many as 2,000 seeds. Coyotes, javelinas, foxes, rodents, and many birds feed on these seeds and the fruit’s lush, red pulp.
(Key to numbers)
1. Seedlings-The newborn saguaro is most vulnerable during the first few years of life. Birds eat seeds and seedlings. People step on them. Thousands of young plants can die because of intense sun or heavy rain.
2. Establishment-New saguaros survive best under shade or “nurse plants” such as palo verdes and mesquites.
3. Youth-Saguaros begin flowering after they grow about eight feet tall.
4. Maturity-When saguaros reach about 75 years of age, they might begin sprouting branches or “arms.”
5. Old Age-The oldest saguaros may weigh more than 7 tons and grow taller than a four-story building.
6. Decline-Severe freezing, wind, lighting, vandalism, and disease are factors that result in saguaro damage or death. Saguaros seldom live more than 200 years."
Marker Name: Seed to Sentinel
 Type of history commemorated: Other
 County: Pima
 Name of any agency/ agencies setting marker: National Park Service
 Year placed: 1961

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Visit Instructions:
To claim a log for this waymark, some proof of visit is required. This proof can be a simple gps photo, a photo with your mascot (a signature item that you use for photographs, similar to using a gps) or a answer to any question that the person who posted the waymark has asked. A gps photo will always be accepted as proof of visit regardless of any specific question a waymark may ask.