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Home Home » GENERA B » Bulbine » Bulbine frutescens, the burn jelly plant
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Bulbine frutescens, the burn jelly plant

Bulbine frutescens, the burn jelly plant
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  • Bulbine capitata
  • Bulbine capitata flowers
  • Bulbine capitata leaves
  • Bulbine cepacea
  • Bulbine cepacea flowers
  • Bulbine cepacea racemes
  • Bulbine frutescens leaves in drought
  • Bulbine frutescens raceme
  • Bulbine frutescens, the burn jelly plant
  • Bulbine frutescens, the useful balsam kopiva
  • Bulbine lagopus
  • Bulbine lagopus maybe
  • Bulbine latifolia
  • Bulbine latifolia pale leaves
  • Bulbine mesembryanthemoides subsp. mesembryanthemoides
  • Bulbine mesembryanthemoides subsp. mesembryanthemoides
  • Bulbine mesembryanthemoides subsp. mesembryanthemoides, the waterglasie

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Description

The burn jelly plant, one of the everyday usage names of Bulbine frutescens, is a fast growing, ground covering perennial with erect, succulent green leaves. The leaves grow in opposite rows, clasping the branched stems at the base. Clumps of this plant spread steadily, helped by adventitious roots sprouting from stems on or near the ground.

The inflorescence is borne as a single raceme on an erect stalk. Blooming is more prevalent in spring, but may continue all year round. Six yellow, sometimes orange or even white petals share the star flower’s allure with feathery yellow stamens, the hallmark of the Bulbine genus. (The related and similar Bulbinella species don’t have these fluffy appendages to their stamens, only the more common, straight filaments holding up their anthers.)

The fruit is a small round capsule that releases black seeds for wind dispersal. This is different to the flat, winged seed shape of many other plants belonging to the Asphodelaceae family.

Some writers place the plant in the Eastern, Western and Northern Cape Provinces; other sources have it that the distribution area covers all of South Africa (Vlok and Schutte-Vlok, 2010; www.plantzafrica.com).

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Photographer
Thabo Maphisa
Author
Ivan Latti
 
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