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Asclepias asperula

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Antelope horns

Secure (NatureServe)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Gentianales
Family: Apocynaceae
Genus: Asclepias
Species:
A. asperula
Binomial name
Asclepias asperula
Synonyms[1]
  • Acerates asperula Decne.
  • Asclepias capricornu Woodson
  • Asclepias decumbens (Nutt.) K.Schum. nom. illeg.
  • Asclepiodora asperula (Decne.) E.Fourn.
  • Asclepiodora decumbens (Nutt.) A.Gray

Asclepias asperula, commonly called antelope horns milkweed or spider milkweed,[2] is a species of milkweed native to the Southwestern United States and northern Mexico.

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Medicinal Minute: Antelope Horns or "Inmortal" (Asclepias asperula)
  • Growing Milkweed for the Monarch Butterfly - A Year Later
  • La Asperula Olorosa - Propiedades y Beneficios
  • Native Milkweeds Such as Antelope Horns Support Monarchs & Other Wildlife
  • Monarch butterfly using heartleaf milkweed (Asclepias cordifolia) in the Little Applegate Valley

Transcription

Description

It is a perennial plant growing to 0.3–0.9 m (1–3 ft) tall, with clustered greenish-yellow flowers with maroon highlights. It blooms from April through June.

Antelope horns is a common milkweed in Central Texas. It gets its name from the follicles (seed pods) that resemble the horns of antelope. You can easily spot the flower clusters (technically, umbellate cymes) in open meadows. Milkweed plants are a major food source for Monarch and Queen butterfly caterpillars and as with other milkweed plants, it bleeds white latex if a stem is cut and this sap is toxic to some animals and to humans. It also makes Monarch and Queen butterflies taste bad to potential predators, a nice defense mechanism. From a distance the flowers appear as tennis-sized spheres, but they are clusters of small green, purple, and white flowers. Each flower has 5 pale green petals that cup upward around 5 prominent white hoods (which store nectar).

Flower structure and pollination

Parts of an antelope horns flower
Parts of an antelope horns flower
Cross section of a single antelope horns flower
Cross section of a single antelope horns flower

The central circular structure is a gynostegium, the fusion of 2 stigma and 5 anthers. Antelope horns do not have individual pollen grains. The pollen sticks together as granular masses contained on a pollinarium structure located within each of the 5 stigmatic chambers. The pollinarium is made up of 2 pollinium “wings” connected to a central corpusculum via 2 translator arms. The picture "Antelope horns pollinarium" shows a pollinarium that was pulled out of the stigmatic slit using an insect pin.

Antelope horns pollinarium
Antelope horns pollinarium
Parts of an Antelope horns pollinarium's
Parts of an Antelope horns pollinarium's

Antelope Horns Pollination

Pollination of Antelope Horns happens when flowers are visited by insects that get their reward in nectar (in this case primarily sucrose) which is accessible at the base of each of the hoods. Several different types of insects visit milkweed searching for nectar including bees, butterflies, moths, flies and beetles. As they move around the flower in search of nectar one of their legs may slip into a stigmatic slit. The only way to safely remove their leg is to move it upwards toward the top of the slit. The leg can then snag on the corpusculum and pull out the entire pollinarium. When the insect visits another milkweed flower carrying this pollinarium, there is a chance a pollinium would slip into an empty stigmatic slit, dislodge, and remain there. If the orientation of the pollinium is correct and the concentration of nectar surrounding a pollinium is optimal, pollination will take place.

Pollen tubes grow out of a germination pore on the convex surface of the pollen mass on pollinium into the stigma and down one of the 2 styles to the ovary where the male genetic material fertilizes the (female) ovules. Each ovule has the potential to form one seed. The image "Antelope Horns pollen tube" shows the route pollen tubes take to transfer genetic material into an ovary. Asclepias asperula does not self-pollinate so they are dependent on attracting pollinators that will transfer pollen between plants.

Antelope Horns pollen tube
Antelope Horns pollen tube

Taxonomy

Asclepias asperula is divided into two subspecies: A. asperula. ssp. asperula and A. asperula ssp. capricornu. Ssp. capricornu occurs in comparatively more mesic conditions and has comparatively broader leaves, floral crowns that are more white, and a more prostrate habit. Ssp. asperula occurs in comparatively more arid conditions and has comparatively narrower leaves, floral crowns that are more purple, and a more upright habit.[3][2]

Ecology

Like several other species of milkweed, A. asperula is a food for monarch butterfly caterpillars. Along with being food for monarchs, the plants also contain toxic cardiac glycosides (cardenolides) that the monarchs retain, making them unpalatable and poisonous to predators. For the same reason, A. asperula can be poisonous to livestock and other animals, including humans.

In addition to the monarch, it is a larval host to the dogbane tiger moth, the queen butterfly, and the unexpected cycnia.[4]

Cultivation

The plant is difficult to cultivate and does not grow well in containers.[5][6] In cultivation, this species favors quickly draining soil that is high in inorganic matter, such as sand and rock chips. It can grow in loam and clay, if provided with adequate drainage and frequent dryness.[7] Moisture level demands and tolerance depend upon the subspecies and possibly ecotype. The plant has a deep taproot, so it needs to have the deepest-possible pot if grown in a container and should not be waterlogged.[7]

References

  1. ^ "The Plant List: A Working List of All Plant Species". Retrieved 12 April 2015.
  2. ^ a b "Asclepias asperula ssp. capricornu". Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center. The University of Texas at Austin. 2019. Retrieved 21 January 2019.
  3. ^ "Asclepias asperula subsp. asperula". The Jepson Herbarium. Regents of the University of California. 2019. Retrieved 21 January 2019.
  4. ^ The Xerces Society (2016). Gardening for Butterflies: How You Can Attract and Protect Beautiful, Beneficial Insects. Timber Press. ISBN 978-1-60469-761-2.[page needed]
  5. ^ "Persnickety Texas Milkweeds "May not Lend Themselves to Mass Seed Production"". 13 March 2013.
  6. ^ "How to Get Texas Native Milkweed Seeds to Germinate". 13 March 2013.
  7. ^ a b "Asclepias asperula — Antelope Horn". Plant Finder. Native American Seed. 2019. Retrieved 21 January 2019.

Further reading

External links

This page was last edited on 2 December 2023, at 22:00
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