Trachyandra hispida: Difference between revisions

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Created page with "{{Species page (seed plant) |image = None50x50.jpg |legend = |author = |order = |family = |genus = Trachyandra |nb chromosomes = 2n = |origin = area of origin |status = wild or cultivated |english = |french = }}{{Box |title = Uses summary |color = lightgreen |text = }} == Description == <gallery mode="packed"> </gallery> == Popular names == {| class="wikitable" style="width:100%;" |} == Classification == == Cultivars == == History == == Uses == == Refere..."
 
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== Classification ==
== Classification ==
''Trachyandra hispida'' (L.) Kunth (1843).


== Cultivars ==
== Cultivars ==
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== Uses ==
== Uses ==
{{Citation box
|text=''Anthericum hispidum'' Linn. ''Liliaceae''. ST. BERNARD'S LILY. South Africa. The sprouts are eaten as a substitute for asparagus. They are by no means unpalatable, says Carmichael <ref>Hooker, W. J. ''Bot. Misc.'' 2:264. 1831.</ref>, though a certain clamminess which they possess, that induces the sensation as of pulling hairs from between one's lips, renders them at first unpleasant.
<references/>
|author =[[Anthericum (Sturtevant, 1919)|Sturtevant, ''Notes on edible plants'', 1919]].
}}


== References ==
== References ==


== Links ==
== Links ==
 
*[https://www.worldfloraonline.org/taxon/wfo-0000748357 World Flora Online]


[[Category:Trachyandra]]
[[Category:Trachyandra]]

Latest revision as of 08:21, 30 September 2025

Trachyandra hispida

alt=Description of None50x50.jpg picture.
Order [[]]
Family [[]]
Genus Trachyandra

2n =

Origin : area of origin

wild or cultivated


Uses summary


Description

Popular names

Classification

Trachyandra hispida (L.) Kunth (1843).

Cultivars

History

Uses

Anthericum hispidum Linn. Liliaceae. ST. BERNARD'S LILY. South Africa. The sprouts are eaten as a substitute for asparagus. They are by no means unpalatable, says Carmichael [1], though a certain clamminess which they possess, that induces the sensation as of pulling hairs from between one's lips, renders them at first unpleasant.

  1. Hooker, W. J. Bot. Misc. 2:264. 1831.


References

Links