Operation Wildflower
  • Home
  • Albums
  • Links
    • Botanical Gardens
    • OWF Sites
    • Public Parks, Gardens and Reserves
    • Reference Sites
    • Private Parks, Gardens and Reserves
  • 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 » PARKS AND GARDENS » Goegap Nature Reserve » Euphorbia ramiglans now E. caput-medusae
Back to Category Overview
Total images in all categories: 12,246
Total number of hits on all images: 7,575,631

Euphorbia ramiglans now E. caput-medusae

Euphorbia ramiglans now E. caput-medusae
Start View full size
[Please activate JavaScript in order to see the slideshow]
Previous Previous
Image 22 of 31  
Next Next
Image 24 of 31  
  • Daisies among the klipkoppe
  • Didelta spinosa flowerheads at several stages
  • Diospyros ramulosa, the  t'koenoebe
  • Dyerophytum africanum
  • Euphorbia avasmontana var. avasmontana
  • Euphorbia ephedroides flowers
  • Euphorbia filiflora, Nel se melkbos
  • Euphorbia hamata male cyathia
  • Euphorbia ramiglans now E. caput-medusae
  • Goegap Nature Reserve
  • Hermbstaedtia glauca
  • Kewa salsoloides
  • Monsonia crassicaulis spines
  • Ozoroa dispar, t'orrie or kliphout
  • Peliostomum virgatum
  • Solanum burchellii, tandpynbos
  • Trachyandra bulbinifolia locally known as solknol

Image information

Description

Stem tubercles of Euphorbia ramiglans as well as the leaves are like what one finds on E. caput-medusae, the proper species name today for both plants and some other euphorbias of the region (among them E. muirii and E. tuberculata).

The stem-tip rosette of narrow, ascending leaves is dark green to purple. Leaves appear upon the youngest tubercles emerging at the stem-tip during the winter-rain induced growing season. They disappear soon.

Note the globose, dry fruit capsule in picture splitting along its seams.

One would have thought that two-legged offspring of the mythical snake-haired Medusa might by now be extinct, due to incompatibility of the modern social environment. But last Saturday night in the Mall somebody or something was spotted…

The least one says about that the better, as it would be bad form to upset the sensibilities of our younger and more delicate readers (Frandsen, 2017; Williamson, 2010; iNaturalist; http://redlist.sanbi.org).

Hits
240
Photographer
Thabo Maphisa
Author
Ivan Latti
 
Back to Category Overview
Powered by JoomGallery