Alepidea peduncularis

Alepidea peduncularis is an edible perennial herb native to the montane grasslands of East and South Africa.

Alepidea peduncularis
Herbarium sheet of the type specimen of Alepidea peduncularis
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
(unranked):
(unranked):
(unranked):
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
A. peduncularis
Binomial name
Alepidea peduncularis

Growth

The plant bears a flowering stalk about 70 cm in height, and a basal rosette of leaves with distinctively fringed margins.[1] The leaves are edible, and the roots are used in medicine.[2]

gollark: I vaguely read somewhere that nuclear winter was somewhat discredited as an idea.
gollark: Not that overpopulation actually is much of an issue.
gollark: *Technically*, that's not wrong.
gollark: Climate change will cause mass migration and sea level rising and things eventually. Those are bad.
gollark: Apparently in a few billion years various feedback loops and an increasingly warm sun will cause the oceans to boil, and a few billion after that the Sun will swell into a red giant and destroy anything remaining.

References

  1. Hyde, Mark; Bart Wursten. "Flora of Zimbabwe".
  2. Grubben, G.J.H. & Denton, O.A. (2004) Plant Resources of Tropical Africa 2. Vegetables. PROTA Foundation, Wageningen; Backhuys, Leiden; CTA, Wageningen.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.