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Crassula arborescens
Crassula arborescens
Crassula arborescens
Green and red leaves Crassula capitell
Crassula capitella
Crassula capitella
Crassula capitella 'Campfire' as ground cover
Crassula 'Campfire
Crassula capitella ‘Campfire’
Crassula capitella thyrsiflora in the ground
Crassula capitella thyrsiflora
Crassula capitella subsp. thyrsiflora
Crassula lanuginosa in pot
Crassula lanuginosa
Crassula lanuginosa
Crassula muscosa succulent green plant
Crassula muscosa
Crassula muscosa
Crassula ovata at the Botanical Garden of Crete
Jade tree
Crassula ovata
Crassula ovata Hobbit in pot
Crassula ovata 'Hobbit
Crassula ovata 'Hobbit'
Crassula ovata 'Minor' in pot
Crassula ovata 'Minor
Crassula ovata 'Minor'
Crassula pyramidalis in pot
Mini jade pagoda
Crassula pyramidalis
Crassula Buddha's temple in pot
Crassula 'Buddha's Temple
Crassula pyramidalis 'Buddha's Temple'
Crassula rupestris in pot
Crassula rupestris
Crassula rupestris
Crassula marnieriana in pot
Crassula marnieriana
Crassula rupestris subsp. marnieriana
Curio rowleyanus leaves water reserve
Curio rowleyanus
Curio rowleyanus
Zigzag cactus stem
Cactus zigzag
Disocactus anguliger
Sansevieria ballyi in flower
Dracaena ballyi
Dracaena ballyi
Fat plant triangle leaves Echeveria agavoides
Echeveria agavoides
Echeveria agavoides
Echeveria colorata in the ground
Echeveria colorata
Echeveria colorata
Green succulent Echeveria elegans
Echeveria elegans
Echeveria elegans
Suculent green plant with pink margin Echeveria prolifia
Echeveria prolifica
Echeveria prolifica
Echeveria pulidonis in pot
Echeveria pulidonis
Echeveria pulidonis
Echeveria shaviana in pot
Echeveria shaviana
Echeveria shaviana
Woolly cactus Espostoa lanata
Woolly cactus
Espostoa lanata
Hairy cactus Espostoa melanostele
Espostoa melanostele
Espostoa melanostele subsp. melanostele

Succulents

What do a 40-metre-high baobab and a ten-centimetre Haworthia in a pot have in common? They're both succulents. The reason they look so different is that succulents are not a botanical category in the strict sense of the term. The term refers to plants that can withstand prolonged drought.

Succulents, definition

Succulent comes from the Latin succulentus, meaning "full of juice". Succulent plants have this name because they store water in their roots, stems or leaves. They then transform it into a mucilaginous juice, drawing on these reserves when drought sets in.

The juice gives the stems and leaves a fleshy appearance. This is why succulent plants are sometimes called fat plants.

Water reserves enable succulents to survive in arid environments. They thrive in hostile environments, in the desert or at altitude. Succulents are native to the plains and mountains of southern Africa and South America.

To resist these extreme conditions and predators, succulents have developed ways of defending themselves. Some, like cacti, have replaced their leaves with thorns to avoid being devoured by herbivores. Others are covered with bloom, a thin waxy layer that protects them from heat and parasites.

Succulent varieties

There are over 12,000 succulent species. They are divided into different botanical families such as Crassulaceae, Cactaceae, Liliaceae, Asteraceae..

To create an outdoor rock garden of succulents, you can select hardy varieties of Agave (Agave havardiana and Agave montana), prickly pear (Opuntia), dwarf aloe (Aloe Aristata), orpins (Sedum), yuccas (Yucca filamentosa or Yucca gloriosa) or houseleeks (Sempervivum). They can withstand sub-zero temperatures, provided the roots are kept dry. If you live by the sea or in a region where it doesn't freeze, add a Delosperma and an Aeonium.

When your winters are harsh, grow your succulents indoors. Sansevieria (mother-in-law's tongues), Haworthia, Echeveria, Gasteria, Crassula, orchid cactus (Epiphyllum), Aloe vera and Euphorbia enjoy the warmth of our homes and require little maintenance. Some green plants, like Kalanchoe and Schlumbergera truncata (Christmas cactus), even bloom in winter.

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