SAGO WARNING: The seeds produced in the dome-shaped cone of female sago palms (Cycas revoluta) are ripening now and are highly toxic to dogs. However, something about the taste of the fleshy red outer ...
DANGER TO DOGS: The seeds produced in the dome-shaped cone of female sago palms (Cycas revoluta) are ripening now and are highly toxic to dogs. Apparently, something about the taste of the fleshy red ...
Q: After that article on sago palm (cycads) seeds killing two dogs, I am wondering what would be a good replacement for them? A: Many landscapes have relied heavily on sago palms, or Cycas revoluta, ...
Just last week, I saw a poor little dog (a King Charles Cavalier) that had ingested a Sago Palm seed. The owners had a buried fence that stopped short of the Sago Palm Plant, but a seed had fallen ...
Sago palm centers look different? It's because some are male and some are female. Dan Gill explains.
I’ve been trying to find some information on sago palms. We have several in Metairie that form a large bulbous center of fronds, but the ones we have in Alabama form a long 18-inch tubular center.
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — The Evans family wants to get the word out to fellow dog owners. "It amazes me there's something that could be eaten one day, and a dog would die the next day. It's that toxic." ...
The lush, long-living Cycas revoluta plant isn't actually a palm at all, though its foliage looks like palm fronds. Sagos are part of the cycad family and are native to southern Japan. Cycads go back ...
Q. My sago has developed a fuzzy-looking cone and what appear to be seeds. Can I sow these? M.H., Houston A. Sago palms, which are not true palms but members of the Cycad family, do not bear cones ...
Cycads are an ancient group of plants that have been around since the age of dinosaurs. They were dominant plants at that time, but most are currently considered endangered. While there are more than ...
A. You can't until a plant produces a cone. The sago, Cycas revoluta, is not really a palm but a member of the genus Cycad. Cycads have been around for more than 200 million years, and sagos, like ...
Sago palms are no strangers to Houstonians. In fact, they tend to be overplanted in the area, so it’s hard to ignore their physical presence; they display an elegant robustness. They can be found ...
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