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Botany Photo of the Day
In science, beauty. In beauty, science. Daily.

Dioscorea elephantipes

Dioscorea elephantipes

Ruth is both today's writer and photographer:

So, which is the plant and which is the rock? Luckily for us, this Dioscorea elephantipes, or elephant's foot, hasn't gone deciduous for the summer. The juicy, thick, heart-shaped leaves are born along the single vine-like branch pushing up through the center of the caudex. The caudex resembles a turtle shell in my opinion, leading to another common name: turtle back. I took this picture at Sherman Library and Gardens in Newport Beach, CA. If you ever have a chance to visit this garden, please do! It's a beautiful little place. The cactus and succulent garden is incredible in its species diversity, specimen quality, and design (not to mention the hand-harvested boulders and minerals).

This Dioscorea is native to Africa, specifically the Clanwilliam District of the West Cape and the Graaf-Reinet, Willowmore and Uniondale Districts of the Eastern Cape. The part of the plant that looks like a turtle shell is called a caudex (hence, it is a caudiciform plant). This massive storage unit (reportedly reaching 3m tall!) helps the elephant's foot to survive extreme temperatures from -4°C to 40°C and a wide variety of habitats, including arid rocky outcrops.

For more on Dioscorea elephantipes, including details about its ecology and uses, see the PlantzAfrica profile on Dioscorea elephantipes (and if you'd really like a challenge, spot the botanical terminology error in the fact sheet).

19 Comments

Alphonso Backter commented:

Dioecious, not monoecious

deodasher commented:

Here's what I believe is incorrect:

"The plants are monoecious, that means the flowering sexes are found on separate plants."

Instead, monoecious means that the reproductive organs are on the same plant. The incorrect definition refers to dioecious.

Elizabeth commented:

Really wild!!

CherriesWalks commented:

Cool, can it walk?

Bob Wilson commented:

Another WOW plant from BPotD!. How big is this specimen? Any idea how old it might be??

Carolyn Liesy commented:

I absolutely love this site. While I got an A in Plant Taxonomy (Munz, California Flowering Plants) 40+ years ago, I am now an artist, and just love the pictures as well as the language of the scientific commentary on the plants. What wild descriptive language. What beauty. What insight in to nature. And daily. You are great.

Dennis Abdalla commented:

Hard to believe this is in the yam group! Another Genus (Testudinaria) was or is used for it. The U. of Maryland mascot is 'Testudo' the terripin.

Amir Yarow commented:

Not Dioecious,
Dioscera after the ancient greek Dioscorius I think there are also new world representative/relatives
AY.

elizabeth a airhart commented:

plant the above and it will
walk right of the pot at night

Mary Ann, in Toronto commented:

Wow! What a wonderful exotic plant. A google image search will yield lots more photos showing the whole plant with foliage.

Equisetum commented:

Wow. What a plant, and what a picture. Such great depth of field and color balance in what looks to be a rather difficult overexposure-inviting terrain. I take it that the male and female flowers really are on different plants... Is this one in the "deciduous" stage with only the stipule-like gadgets on the stems where the leaves have been?

The term that's left me puzzled is "karroid" -- MW Unabridged doesn't know either, and a search on "karroid definition" wasn't much help. From what little useful context I found I gather it's a shrub complex somewhat like our California chaparral? Anyone have a picture of Karroid (one's tempted to speculate that it's the Terran hangout of the Witches of Karres)?

m

Allan Hall commented:

cordex is mispelling for caudex, surely?

Sheila commented:

Thank you Ruth, really interesting.

Michael F commented:

"The term that's left me puzzled is "karroid" -- MW Unabridged doesn't know either, and a search on "karroid definition" wasn't much help"

Means a plant native to the Karroo, a range of hills in southernmost South Africa.

Equisetum commented:

Thanks, Michael! I think I'll go look up the Karroo and see what makes its plant complex so special--

kipp commented:

The image is not of a dioscorea elephantipes, but of the Mexican species d. mexicana (syn d. macrostachya). The prominent thorny bracts are not present in elephantipes and elephantipes stems are branchier.

Vikram commented:

It is really delicious too.

Marie commented:

@ Michael F and 'Karroo', as a S. African I need to correct :-)

It is spelled Karoo - and is not 'a range of hills' at all. It is a vast semi desert known as the Great Karoo and the Little Karoo. The latter is more fertile and receives more rainfall. The collective area straddles several provinces.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karoo

isolde griffith commented:

Hi there - great photo - to the left is the rock - I would like to buy one - do you have any for sell? How much are they ?

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