Category: Seed of the Week (Page 49 of 167)

Seed of the Week: Desert Senna

Our wrinkly mystery seeds from last week were from desert senna, Senna covesii.

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Often it is the desert senna’s bright yellow flowers that catch your eye, standing out against the gray-green foliage.

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You might also “hear” the flowers because the bees that are attracted to them buzz pollinate, hanging onto the anthers and making a loud buzzing noise to vibrate the pollen loose.

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You can even hear the plant when there aren’t any bees. As my friend Lynne points out, “You usually hear it before you see it. It can be in a non-blooming stage and you won’t notice it but you hear it rattle.” That characteristic has led to common names such as rattleweed or rattlebox.

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The sound is produced by the loose seeds rattling in the seed pods. Eventually the pods split open, releasing the seeds. The open pods stay on the plant for some time.

Desert senna is native to the Southwest, so it doesn’t require much water. It is a low-growing perennial, reaching about two feet tall.

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In addition being attractive to bees, desert senna is also a host plant of the cloudless sulphur butterfly. It would make a wonderful addition to butterfly gardens.

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Thank you to Lynne for all her help and contributions to this post.

Mystery Seed of the Week 182

Thanks to my friend Lynne for suggesting the seeds of this plant.

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The plant these come from is from Arizona. The seeds are found in this nifty little pod.

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Aren’t the seeds unusual, with all the wrinkles and bumps?

Do you recognize what plant these seeds are from? If you choose to, please leave a comment with your ideas.

Edit: The answer is now posted.

Seed of the Week: Superstition Mallow

Our mystery seeds last week were from a Superstition mallow, or Palmer’s Indian mallow, 
Abutilon palmeri.

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The Superstition mallow is named for the Superstition Mountains near Phoenix, Arizona. It is a native of the Southwest.

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The first thing you notice are the lovely orange-yellow blossoms, which resemble those of velvet leaf. The invasive weed velvet leaf belongs to the same genus as the mild-mannered Superstition mallow.

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The Superstition mallow also has velvety leaves, but they are distinctly gray-green rather than bright green. Dave’s Garden says the leaves can irritate the skin.

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The seed pods resemble those of velvet leaf, as well. One thing I noticed is that the Superstition mallow has a depression or “well” in the middle. See a better photograph of the seed head, as well as some of the entire plant, at Arizona Wildflowers.

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The velvet leaf seed head in the photograph above doesn’t really have that depressed area in the center.

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Honey bees regularly visit Superstition mallow flowers. They climb right in.

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In the landscape it can be a good-sized shrub. Some reach six feet tall. As a native to the Southwest, it requires very little water. It is recommended for xeriscapes.

Just goes to show you that you can’t tell a plant by its genus.

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