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night. Also, for healthy plants, there can sometimes be as many as three separate blooming events spread out over the warmest months. The plants that bear such flowers can be tall, columnar, and sometimes extremely large and tree-like, but more frequently are thin-stemmed climbers. While some night-blooming cereus are grown indoors in homes or
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Regardless of genus or species, night-blooming cereus flowers are almost always white or very pale shades of other colors, often large and frequently fragrant. Most of the flowers open after nightfall, and by dawn, most are wilting. Plants in the same geographical area tend to bloom on the same
164:, bloom only once a year, for a single night, though most put out multiple flowers over several weeks, each of which opens for only a single night. Other names for one or more cacti with this habit are
376:). Some night-blooming cereus plants produce fruits which are large enough for people to consume. These include some of the members of the genus
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fruit has been commercially grown and sold in tropical locations like
Australia, the Philippines, Vietnam, Taiwan, and Hawaii.
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in colder climates, most plants are too large or ungainly for this treatment and are only found outdoors in tropical areas.
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fruit has the advantage of lacking exterior spines, in contrast to the fruit of cacti such as the
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is the most frequently cultivated outdoors and is the main source of the commercial fruit crop,
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may also be called night-blooming cereus. Cacti which may be called by this name include:
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that bloom at night. The flowers are short lived, and some of these species, such as
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fruit, being brightly colored and having a pleasant taste. Since the late 1990s,
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While many cacti referred to as night-blooming cereus belong to the
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Night
Blooming Cereus Bud to Bloom documentation over 33-day period
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A Tradition of Soup: Flavors from China's Pearl River Delta
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Native
American Food Plants: An Ethnobotanical Dictionary
190:(which is also used for an unrelated plant species).
49:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
147:Night-blooming cereus in full bloom in late-August
345:The dried flowers of the night-blooming cereus (
154:is the common name referring to many flowering
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109:Learn how and when to remove this message
16:Common name for several species of cactus
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475:. North Atlantic Books. p. 122.
380:, but most commonly the fruit of the
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202:, other night-blooming cacti in the
47:adding citations to reliable sources
349:) are a common ingredient used in
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448:. Sterling Pub. Co. p. 76.
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34:needs additional citations for
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502:. Timber Press. p. 73.
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496:Daniel E. Moerman (2010).
313:Selenicereus grandiflorus
161:Selenicereus grandiflorus
138:Selenicereus grandiflorus
469:Teresa M. Chen (2009).
285:Nyctocereus serpentinus
58:"Night-blooming cereus"
445:Cacti & Succulents
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542:Night-blooming plants
239:Epiphyllum oxypetalum
166:princess of the night
152:Night-blooming cereus
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442:Hecht, Hans (1997).
341:Cultivation and uses
204:subfamily Cactoideae
180:Christ in the manger
43:improve this article
358:traditional Chinese
299:Peniocereus greggii
228:, San Pedro cactus)
225:Echinopsis pachanoi
547:Plant common names
418:Queen of the Night
354:slow-simmered soup
260:Hylocereus undatus
194:Genera and species
188:queen of the night
175:Hylocereus undatus
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127:Hylocereus undatus
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41:Please help
36:verification
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366:lǎohuǒ tāng
335:greenhouses
328:Description
293:Peniocereus
279:Nyctocereus
265:dragonfruit
552:Cactoideae
536:Categories
424:References
396:Hylocereus
388:Hylocereus
383:Hylocereus
257:(of which
254:Hylocereus
233:Epiphyllum
219:Echinopsis
69:newspapers
351:Cantonese
310:(usually
282:(usually
272:Monvillea
236:(usually
222:(usually
402:See also
370:Jyutping
247:Harrisia
521:Sources
360:: 老火湯;
83:scholar
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413:Pitaya
378:Cereus
362:pinyin
212:Cereus
186:, and
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429:Notes
172:(for
90:JSTOR
76:books
504:ISBN
477:ISBN
450:ISBN
62:news
347:霸王花
178:),
45:by
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