Cotton plant
Cotton bolls in the field
The Cotton plant is a tropical and semi-tropical shrub of the genus Gossypium (family Malvaceae).
The common commercial varieties are G. hirsutum (US, Australia), G. arboreum and G. herbaceum (Asia), and G. barbadense (Egypt). In the wild it can grow up to 3 meters high. The leaves are broad and have three parts while the seeds are contained in capsules called bolls, surrounded by a downy fibre called lint. The lint is easy to work with or spin and is the source of cotton cloth.
The lint naturally grows in colors of white, brown, and green but fears of contaminating the genetics of white cotton has led many locations to ban growing colored cottons.
Species:
External link
|