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in The Biology Files
A plant pundit comments on plants, the foibles and fun of academic life, and other things of interest.
Friday Fabulous Flower - Here's all the anthers.
Midsummer is an interesting time for our gardens. Lots of lilies of all sorts for color, but then several white flowered species. But the queen of the shade gardens is this black snake root (lots of common names, but it is not a well-known plant here in the upper Midwest) (formerly Cimicifuga racemosa, now Actea racemosa just as good old Linnaeus proposed). The tall (5'+) branched racemes of white flowers show up very nicely in the light shade it prefers. The flowers have no sepals or petals, just a cluster of a hundred or so stamens surrounding a single pistil. The odor is described as a sweet and fetid, to which TPP adds musky, and it attracts an array of pollen foraging insects: flies, gnats, beetles. Although a bit hard to get established, the plants are tough and long-lived. This is a member of the buttercup family which has a number of species whose flowers only have anthers.
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1 comment:
Dearest Phactor,
a very timely post for me. I am just putting together a list of plants for a north-facing shady area and I had completely forgotten the Actaeas - some wonderful plants - as your photo shows.
Thanks,
BrianO
(ps -Actaea not Actea)
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