AI is crying out for regulation, while virologists doing gain-of-function research take the opposite tack. Why?
3 days ago in Genomics, Medicine, and Pseudoscience
A plant pundit comments on plants, the foibles and fun of academic life, and other things of interest.
9 comments:
There's a book.
Among the more-accessible possibilities from the book:
Aconitum (monkshood)
Ricinus (castor bean)
Dieffenbachia (dumb cane)
Euphorbia tirucalli (pencil cactus)
Datura stramonium (jimson weed)
Brugmansia spp./cvv. (angel's trumpet)
Nerium oleander (oleander)
Rhododendron cvv.
Digitalis spp. (foxglove)
Helleborus spp. (hellebore)
Cycas spp. (sago palms)
Clitoria (ternata)? Amorphophallus?
I know we aren't supposed to call fungi plants anymore, but I always think of the 'shrooms and other cryptos in this context: witches' butter, dead man's fingers, devil's snuffbox, and so on.
So we could extend that to phaneros thusly: witches' broom, witchgrass, devil's claw, death camas, bloodroot, devil-weed, skullcap, bleeding heart. Snakeweed (not that snakes are wicked). Clearly works better with common names!
Calamus adspersus or basically any of their relatives.
Carnivorous plants in general are pretty 'wicked', regardless of which connotation you choose... so.. Nepenthes Alata maybe?
Are you sure she's not just peddling plants watered by wicking:
http://forums.gardenweb.com/forums/load/propa/msg1217461811874.html
Wicked Wanda wick waters wisteria?
mr subjunctive correctly points out the book "Wicked Plants". The wicked plant display is planned in anticipation of the author, Amy Stewart, giving a lecture/presentation at our institution. But not having read her book, and not having time right now to do so, this seemed a reasonable approach. Hopefully both it and she will be delightfully wicked.
Bracken, Pteridium aquilinum.
Aralia spinosa
(Devil's walking stick)
Post a Comment