| Agave Americana |
Website Links For Century |
Information AboutAgave Americana |
|
| color = lightgreen | name = Century Plant | image = Agave americana a-m.jpg | image_width = 250px | regnum = Plant ae | divisio = Magnoliophyta | classis = Liliopsida | ordo = Asparagales | familia = Agavaceae | genus = Agave | species = ''A. americana'' | binomial = ''Agave americana'' | binomial_authority = L. }} The Century Plant or '''Maguey''' (''Agave americana'') is an Agave originally from Mexico but cultivated worldwide. It has a spreading rosette (about 4 m wide) of gray-green leaves up to 2 meters (6 ft) long, each with a spiny margin and a heavy spike at the tip. Its common name derives from its habit of only occasionally flowering, but when it does, the spike with a cyme of big yellow flowers, may reach up to 8 meters (25 ft) in height. The plant dies after flowering. The average life-span is around 25 years. Cultivated varieties include the 'Marginata' with yellow stripes along the margins of each leaf, 'Mediopicta' with a central light band, and 'Striata' with multiple stripes along the leaves. It is also known as the American aloe, although it is not related to the true Aloe s. If the flower stem is cut without flowering, a sweet liquid called ''agua miel'' ("honey water") gathers in the heart of the plant. This may be fermented to produce the drink called Pulque , which may then be distilled to produce Mezcal . The leaves also yield fibers, known as pita, which are suitable for making rope, matting, coarse cloth and are used for embroidery of leather in a technique known as Piteado . Both pulque and maguey fibre were important to the economy of pre-columbian Mexico. Production continues today to a much lesser extent. Agave Syrup (also called agave nectar) has recently been marketed as a healthful natural sugar substitute. Subspecies
Pictures Image:Agaveamericanum2web.jpg|In bloom image:Agave americana4.jpg image:Agave americana2.jpg image:Agave americana3.jpg Image:CenturyPlants.jpg|In bloom |