Operation Wildflower
  • Home
  • Albums
  • Links
    • Botanical Gardens
    • Other Sites
    • OWF Sites
  • Information
    • About Us
    • Articles
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Glossary
    • Plant Records
      • Aloes
      • Bulbs
      • Climbers
      • Cycads
      • Euphorbias
      • Ferns
      • Grasses
      • Herbs
      • Orchids
      • Parasites
      • Shrubs
      • Succulents
      • Trees
    • Sources of Information
    • Subject Index
Home Home » GENERA B » Bulbine » Bulbine frutescens flowering white
Back to Category Overview
Total images in all categories: 12,791
Total number of hits on all images: 8,270,779

Bulbine frutescens flowering white

Bulbine frutescens flowering white
Start View full size
[Please activate JavaScript in order to see the slideshow]
Previous Previous
Image 14 of 43  
Next Next
Image 16 of 43  
  • Bulbine capitata flowers
  • Bulbine capitata leaves
  • Bulbine cepacea
  • Bulbine cepacea buds and flowers
  • Bulbine cepacea flowers
  • Bulbine cepacea racemes
  • Bulbine favosa
  • Bulbine frutescens
  • Bulbine frutescens flowering white
  • Bulbine frutescens leaves in drought
  • Bulbine frutescens near Oudtshoorn
  • Bulbine frutescens raceme
  • Bulbine frutescens, the burn jelly plant
  • Bulbine frutescens, the useful balsam kopiva
  • Bulbine lagopus
  • Bulbine lagopus maybe
  • Bulbine latifolia

Image information

Description

Bulbine frutescens flowers are orange or white, apart from the much-seen yellow ones. In each flower here the six white tepals with brown lines from base to tip and visible on both surfaces are angled back, away from the fluffy yellow stamen filaments erect in the flower centre.

The fruits low down in the raceme where flowering happened first are by now facing down, possibly heavy for their curved pedicels. The open flowers in the mid-section of the raceme point outwards on about straight pedicels, their pollinators adapted to vertical landing site flight skills.

The dull-looking buds erect at the top have pedicels curving up, their oblong bodies progressively smaller and more densely together nearer the raceme tip (Curtis-Scott, et al, 2020; Andrew, 2017; Vlok and Schutte-Vlok, 2015; iNaturalist).

Hits
23
Photographer
Louis Jordaan
Author
Ivan Latti
 
Back to Category Overview
Powered by JoomGallery