All cacti and other native plants are protected in Arizona.
Saguaro cactus fruit is one food that Arizona is known for. Other foods that Arizona is known for include Prickly pear, Navajo-churro sheep, and mesquite pod flour.
The saguaro only grows in the deserts of Arizona. If they were not protected, commercial cactus nurseries would quickly remove the plants to sell for landscaping across the warmer regions of the southwest. Texas has no such rules and areas that were once covered by a variety of cactus species and other desert vegetation are now devoid of these interesting plants.
Arizona has a dessert climate. Thus it is good to plant cactus there and other plants that don't need very much water to survive.
lacrosse and football are two that i know of
I believe that at least in the US state of Arizona harming a saguaro in any manner, including cactus plugging, is illegal by state law, and when houses or highways are built, special permits must be obtained to move or destroy any saguaro affected.
For the USA: All these states have some mountains and other types of vegetation, but Arizona, Nevada, California, Utah, New Mexico, even parts of Idaho have desert and cactus. The Great Basin desert covers most of Nevada, and a good bit of Utah.
Cacti are found throughout the state of Arizona. Some common places to find cacti in Arizona include the Sonoran Desert, Saguaro National Park, Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, and various other desert regions within the state.
Although, along with other native plants, the saguaro is protected by the state of Arizona, it is neither endangered nor threatened.
cactus because it is from desert and if will rain on desert the cactus will zip the water but they don't really ubos it they only store the other water that they zip.
No, the Grand Canyon National Park is exclusively located in northwestern Arixona.
A cactus plant grows best in its native habitat. But it's an adaptable survivor. So it grows just as well in indoor and outdoor environments that are controlled for heat, light, moisture, and vegetative competition.