Sierra magazine
selected "7 of the World's Strangest Flowers." Above is video of the
Touch-Me-Not, native to Central and South America but now growing many
other places:
You might easily overlook this herb, with its dainty
pink flowers and delicate, fern-like leaves. The mimosa pudica doesn’t
just look demure, though. Barely touching its leaves causes them to
fold inward and droop downward—hence the flower’s species name, pudica,
Latin for “shy, bashful, or shrinking,” as well as its nicknames,
“touch-me-not” and “shy plant.” The leaves usually reopen in a few
minutes. Other stimuli, including warming and shaking the plant, produce
the same phenomenon. The leaves fold and wilt in the evening, too, but
they stay that way until sunrise…
No comments:
Post a Comment