Click Here To Visit The SRGC Main Site
(cf. the picture of the fruits posted a few weeks ago
The coin envelope at the back of the green plant saucer is 2" × 3.5", to give you a sense of scale. The black tray in the front contains such seeds as I've already harvested. Of the four fruit I've dealt with, two were dried out husks — perhaps a homeless slug hollowed them out to make a cozy nest. The other two had over 53 sound seeds between them, as shown.You can see how some of the fruits were scalded by the brilliant sun last week.The second photo is of my supposed Mandragora autumnalis in flower. You will note the purplish tinge to the cluster of flowers in the center of the rosette of leaves. This may, or may not, be diagnostic.
Your M. caulescens are much more green in flower than this very dark type showed earlier by Magnar, from a Tromsø garden, Johan......
Thanks Maggi!Great to see different mandragora species together side by side. Anyone who knows how many species within the genus?
is it that the botanical keys utilize the musical pitch in which the plant screams when uprooted?I. Plant screams on note above middle C → II.Plant screams on note below middle C → III.