Monday 23 June 2014

Lamprocapnos Spectabilis

Lamprocapnos spectabilis (Bleeding Heart, Dutchman's Breeches, Lyre Flower)

Saturday 21 June 2014

Prickly Pear Cactus

Known as prickly pear cactus (Opuntia spp), the leaves and fruit of this desert plant can be harvested and consumed to treat a variety of conditions — including diabetes, obesity, cardiovascular disease and inflammation.

Prickly pear cactus orange flowers opuntia humifusa

The Beautiful Prickly Pear cactus in blooms providing a valuable food source to the bees, bats, moths and other insects, then transforming into a delicious, succulent fruit providing a food source for other mammals including humans.

Borago officinalis or Borage, Starflower

Borago Flowers Normally produces large bristly gray-green leaves and beautiful powder blue starlike flowers. Grows to 18 inches with 12 inch spread.

Wednesday 18 June 2014

Amorphophallus Bulbifer

Amorphophallus bulbifer is ripening a lot of fruit these years, at the UConn EEB greenhouses. Despite of appearances, and the fact that birds or some other animal disperser perhaps eats them, it’d probably be a bad idea for a person to sample these berries. Amorphophallus is an aroid (family Araceae), a group famous for being toxic to humans. In several aroids, all parts of the plant comprises microscopic calcium oxalate crystals, which annoy the lining of the mouth and throat, causing penetrating pain and swelling that can be life-threatening if the airway becomes constricted. In certain aroids and for few people, the crystals can even root pain and rashes on the skin of hands exposed to sap from cut plant parts.

Amorphophallus



A pair of beautiful plants with blooms as erratic as their odor is pungent is likely to make a short-lived appearance this month in the Tropical Conservatory at Marie Selby Botanical Gardens. These "corpse plants" have massive blooms that smell like rotting flesh. The last time two corpse plants bloomed together at Selby Gardens was in 1999. Therefore; that time the largest plant reached a height of approximately 5 feet. The full bloom lasts only a few days. The corpse plant, or Amorphophallus titanium, is native to Sumatra. It's listed as a threatened species and it infrequently blooms in captivity. Few visitors may find the plant's appearance as unpleasant as its odor the name "Amorphophallus" is derived from the Greek for "giant misshapen penis." Every living thing has its beauty and purpose.


Monday 16 June 2014

Gazania linearis (Treasure Flower)




Gazania linearis is a species of flowering plant in the daisy family known by the common name Treasure Flower

"Flowers don’t worry about how they’re going to bloom. They just open up and turn toward the light and that makes them beautiful." - Jim Carre

Saturday 14 June 2014

Sandersonia aurantiaca

Sandersonia aurantiaca (Chinese Lantern Lily, Christmas Bells)

Wild Prairie Rose

Here's to that special moment of the season when you see the first wild rose. 

Monday 9 June 2014

Habenaria radiata

So Beautiful ~ The species of plant Habenaria radiata is known for having its flowers shaped like a "Dove of peace". Amazing, eh

Saturday 7 June 2014

“Giant Rafflesia” One of Largest Flowers in the World



Rafflesia is a genus of parasitic flowering plants. It contains about 28 species including 4 partly characterized species as recognized by Willem Meijer in 1997. This flower has been found in southeastern Asia, on the Philippines, Thailand, Malay Peninsula, and Borneo, Sumatra. Indonesian guide Dr. Joseph Arnold actually discovered Rafflesia in 1818 in the rain forest of Indonesia. The flower was named after Sir Thomas Stamford Raffles, the leader of the expedition. Although it was found even earlier by Louis Deschamps in Java somewhere between 1791 and 1794, but his notes and illustrations, seized by the British in 1803, were not available to western science until 1861.
The dramatic Rafflesia flowers sometimes considered the largest single flowers in the world; the leathery petals can reach over 90 centimeters across. Rafflesia is a parasite that depends totally upon its host; the mainstream of the plant’s tissues exist as thread-like strands completely within the host’s cells. These host plants are vines of Tetrastigma spp., and the Rafflesia plant is itself not visible till the reproduction stage, when the flowers first bud through the woody vine and then open into the brilliant spectacle that is world-renowned today.
The flowers can take up to 10 months to mature from the first visible bud to the open bloom, which may last no more than a few days. Presently 17 species of Rafflesia are recognized and these primarily differ in the morphology of their flowers. In general the flowers contains of five leathery petals that are orange in colors and mottled with cream-colored warts. There’s a deep well in the center of the flower containing a central raised disc raised that support numerous vertical spines. The sexual organs are set beneath the rim of the disk, and male and female flowers are separate. But a few have bisexual flowers. Little is known about seed dispersal.
However, tree shrews and other forest mammals eat the fruits and disperse the seeds. Rafflesia is the official state flower of Indonesia, the Sabah state in Malaysia, and of the Surat Thani Province, Thailand. The flowers appearance and smell like rotten body, henceforth its local names which translate to “corpse flower” or ‘meat flower’. The foul odor entices insects such as flies, which transport pollen from male to female flowers.
The name “corpse flower” applied to Rafflesia can be confusing because this common name also refers to the titan arum (Amorphophallus titanum) of the family Araceae. Moreover, Amorphophallus has the world’s largest un-branched inflorescence; it is sporadically credited as having the world’s largest flower. Both Rafflesia and Amorphophallus are flowering plants, but they’re only distantly related. Rafflesia ‘Arnoldii’ has the largest ‘single’ flower of any flowering plant, at least in terms of weight. A. titanum has the largest ‘unbranched’ inflorescence, while the ‘talipot’ palm forms the largest ‘branched’ inflorescence, containing countless of flowers; the ‘talipot’ is monocarpic, meaning the individual plants die after flowering.
Due to insufficient quantity and the short-lived lifespan, much about these plants remains covered in mystery. Unluckily, one of the few natural sanctuaries of the plant, the Malaysian rainforest, is at its darkest hour, with hundreds of square kilometers being wiped out every year. Therefore; excessive habitat loss is the main concern regarding the future of these magnificent flowers, as well as many other flora and fauna with which they share habitat. There is, though, a reason for hope as botanists in Borneo have recently achieved what it was believed to be impossible: they artificially grew a Rafflesia flower on a host plant. Given the fact that its bud blooms into a flower at midnight during the rainy season and that the flower itself only lasts for a limited days, you’ve to plan your exploration trip carefully while also relying on luck.