Crucifixion Thorn or Corona de Cristo

SIMAROUBACEAE: Castela emoryi

Crucifixion thorn is a common name applied to more than one shrub in the southwestern United States, so identification can be confusing. The name is a reference to the Biblical story of the crown of thorns placed on the head of Christ at his crucifixion.

The Bureau of Land Management maintains a large group of these plants in a fenced-in area just south of Highway 98 at Coyote Two Road, 8 miles east of the County Road S-2 junction. To see them with red or brown berries resembling drops of blood, visit between mid-May and mid-July.