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flowers 3-25-2010 A botanist’s dream

Tropical plants and flowers 3-25-2010

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Tropical plants and flowers 3-25-2010. A botanist’s dream. Annato, or Lipstick Bush, is a common spice. Annato lipstick in action. Who can resist plucking a Hotlips flower and sticking it between your lips?. Now you see why they are called hot lips. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Tropical plants and flowers 3-25-2010

A botanist’s dream

Page 2: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Annato, or Lipstick Bush, is a common spice.

Page 3: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Annato lipstick in action.

Page 4: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Who can resist plucking a Hotlips flower and sticking it between your lips?

Page 5: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Now you see why they are called hot lips.

Page 6: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Bat Flowers (Tacca) are so named due to the black flowers reminding someone of bats.

Page 7: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Black orchids, the Belize national flower

Page 8: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Orchids are not uncommon, but depend on the right amount of rain to bloom.

Page 9: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

People love orchids because they are beautiful. Biologists love them because they are sexual tricksters.

Page 10: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Utricularia, or Bladderwort, is an insectivorous plant. In the U.S., they are almost all aquatic. The roots and insectivorous bladders (the white ones) of this species grow in soil. The specimen is from a cloud forest in Venezuela.

Page 11: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Jackass Bitters is one of the most important medicinal plants to the Maya. It is most often used for an upset stomach (“thebitta, the betta”)

Page 12: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Doug Nobile curing his runs by chewing Jackass bitters.

Page 13: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

The beefworm plant oozes a white, alkaloid that Maya use to kill botfly larvae.

Page 14: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Marcos Ack shows the white alkaloid ooze that one dabs on the beefworm to kill it.

Page 15: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Beefworm plant flowers and fruits (taken in August).

Page 16: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Red-sticky is a common plant used by the Maya to stop bleeding. They just wad up the leaves and press them on the wound. It gets its name from the reddish stem.

Page 17: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Fish Plant is a rounded leafed plant that the Maya use to wrap fish when cooking. It also has medicinal uses.

Page 18: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Cassava (manihot, manioc, yuca) is a staple food of the Maya.

Page 19: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Vincenti Ack and Macal, also called poi. In the southeast, it grows wild along bayous and rivers and is called Elephant Ear, Colocasia.

Page 20: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Primitive societies always had viagra-like medications.

Page 21: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

This is parapim, the kek’chi name for the viagra-like plant used in San Miguel.

Page 22: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

This plant is used to ease heavy menstruation.

Page 23: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

This wild yam is used to induce abortion.

Page 24: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

A Caribbean favorite is cristophine (called merliton in New Orleans).

Page 25: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Pipers (same genus as black pepper), with their characteristic seed stalks sticking straight up, are from the tropics.

Page 26: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Bird peppers – a favorite in Belize.

Page 27: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

A passion flower species in fruit. Near Belmopan, 8-07.

Page 28: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

An unidentified legume in fruit. Note the closed leaves to the left. Near Belmopan, 8-07.

Page 29: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Bougainvillea is a common tropical landscape species (also comes in purple & peach).

Page 30: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Pineapples grow in most people’s yards, and are wonderful when fresh.

Page 31: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Bottlebrush plants attract a variety of nectar feeding animals.

Page 32: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

More flowers on trees.

Page 33: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Frangipani’s, a commonly seen non-native, are very pretty and aromatic.

Page 34: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Helios is a non-chlorophyll plant found in Cockscomb in 2004.

Page 35: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Heliconias come in a variety of shapes & colors. Have interesting communities of organisms that live in those colorful bracts [good research topic!]

Page 36: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Vincente Ack demonstrates how to make a sound like a toucan with a heliconia flower.

Page 37: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Writing heliconia

Page 38: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Gingers are also common in the tropics – and there are a number of species.

Page 39: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Drip-tip leaves – very characteristic of tropical plants. They ensure that the leaf doesn’t stay wet and encourage growth of mold and mildew.

Page 40: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

A wonderful drip-tip leaf on a palm in Tambopata, Perú.

Page 41: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Melastomataceae – a characteristic plant family of the tropics.

Page 42: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Mistletoe: Central Venezuela. The plant (l), the very sticky seed (r) that sticks to the bill of birds, and a new plant (bottom) that grows from a seed scraped off the birds beak on the limb.

Page 43: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Cacti are also typical of most tropical environments. (Why?)

Page 44: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Devil’s Guts is a type of cactus that produces a tasty fruit called pataya.

Page 45: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Shoe String Cactus, Rhipsalis capilliformis

Page 46: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Solanum mammosum: fruit of Udder Plant (l) and spines on another species’ leaf (r) that prevent predation.

Page 47: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Most species of Solanum are toxic; again, note the spines on the tops of their leaves. BTW, the tomato is a member of the Solanaceae.

Page 48: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Datura (Angel’s Trumpets) are common. This is a common source of hallucinogenic compounds.

Page 49: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

A typical tropical Hibiscus species.

Page 50: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Jade vine is a common ornamental in the tropics. (Another legume…)

Page 51: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

The Traveling Palm is a common landscape species. Not native—introduced from Madagascar, just like Flamboyant.

Page 52: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

The grapes on Beach Grapes.

Page 53: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Tropical fruits, such as this caimito, often look weird.

Page 54: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

John Crow Bead, Cojoba graciflora

Page 55: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Tietie vine – Belize. The “hooks” help it to climb. They are only on the distal end of the vine.

Page 56: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Tietie has long, sharp thorns, and is a bush as it grows.

Page 57: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Close-your-butt (also called Bay Cedar, Pixoy, Tapaculo), Guazuma ulmiflora. Guess what it is used for. Don’t eat too many mangos!

Page 58: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

You may be familiar with louffas, used in our tubs. On the right is a louffa, which is the interior of those growing on vines (l) in San Miguel.

Page 59: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Sleeping plants in the rainforest in Trinidad.

Page 60: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Japanese Hats, Holmskiolda sanguinea – Trinidad.

Page 61: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Spiny Bamboo is common along rivers in Belize. Iguanas love to bask on the upper branches, and thus got the name “bamboo chickens.”

Page 62: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

When you see stands of bamboo like this, look closely for iguanas.

Page 63: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Haul-em-back – a common vine that is covered with small thorns that simply will not let go of you.

Page 64: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

The fronds of all ferns grow from unfolding “fiddleheads.”

Page 65: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

The Powder Puff Tree, Calliandra. Hummingbirds love this plant.

Page 66: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Sugarcane is a common agricultural crop in the north.

Page 67: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

“Sameness” of tropical forests

Dark with flecks of sun Tall trees (at least appearing so, due to

“thin” shape with most branches high) Flaring roots, buttresses, prop roots Tangled where sunlight penetrates Lots of woody vines Humid!!!

Page 68: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

“Sameness” of plants

Many woody Wood often hard and insect resistant

(why?) Leaves

– Drip trips– Waxy– Often oval, unlobed, and with no teeth

Page 69: Tropical plants and flowers  3-25-2010

Differences of tropical forests

Rich (e.g., alluvial) vs. poor (sandy) soils

Evolutionary history (kinds of organisms)

Terra firme vs. várzea Not all wet or superwet—don’t forget the

seasonally dry forest (and savannahs and high mountains and …)