- Source: Eminium spiculatum
Eminium spiculatum is a species of plant in the family Araceae.
Description
Perennial. Corm thick, globular. Leaves petiolate; petiole sheathing, often purplish. Limbs shorter than petioles, those of the first shoots regular, the others decomposed into secondary limbs issued at the base with one fitting into the other. Spathe with a tube equal to the lamina. The outer part of both has light background with numerous brown veins; the inner part of the lamina blackish brown or purplish, granulated. Appendix black, short.
Flowering
March–May.
Habitat
Fields, waste ground, rocks.
Distribution
Coast, middle mountain, Beqaa Valley of Lebanon.
Geographic area
Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, Jordan, Egypt.
The corms of this plant are appreciated by Egyptian Bedouins, who eat them like potatoes after boiling. Some eat the seeds in times of scarcity.
References
Georges Tohme& Henriette Tohme, Illustrated Flora of Lebanon, National Council For Scientific Research, Second Edition 2014.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Flora Lebanon
- Eminium spiculatum
- Eminium
- List of Araceae genera
- Wild edible plants of Israel and Palestine
- Flora of Lebanon
- List of native plants of Flora Palaestina (E–O)