Skip to main content
Close

Asclepsia

asclepsia curassavica

Photo by Melita
Published on Project Noah
Zoom
NominateNominate for Wildlife Photograph of the Month
reportFlag Spotting

19.8519, -97.2388

Field Notes

Description:

Typical plants are evergreen perennial subshrubs that grow up to 1 m (3.3 ft) tall and have pale gray stems. The leaves are arranged oppositely on the stems and are lanceolate or oblong-lanceolate shaped ending in acuminate or acute tips. Like other members of the genus, the sap is milky. The flowers are in cymes with 10-20 flowers each. They have purple or red corollas and corona lobes that are yellow or orange. Flowering occurs nearly year round.[1] The 5–10 cm (2.0–3.9 in) long, fusiform shaped fruits are called follicles. The follicles contain tan to brown seeds that are ovate in shape and 6–7 mm (0.24–0.28 in) long. The flat seeds have silky hairs that allow the seeds to float on air currents when the pod-like follicles dehisce (split open).

Habitat:

American tropics

Notes:

Asclepsias is the favorite flower of the Monarch butterfly. You can fins it everywhere on its way from Canadá to México.

Species ID Suggestions

Asclepia

Comments (2)

I spotted the same plant, some time ago... http://www.projectnoah.org/spottings/7059394 Alice helped me to identify....
Scarlet Milkweed is the common name. You have the ID as the title.
Photographed
PublishedAugust 23, 2011

Accelerate our Mission to Photograph 
Every Species in the World!

Image
Butterflies icon

Wildlife Community

Wildlife Community

Join a worldwide community passionate about wildlife and nature!

Join Project Noah

Nature School

Nature School

Transform your green space into a curiosity-creating nature classroom!

Visit Nature School

Wildlife Game

Wildlife Game

Defend wildlife throughout the jungle in thrilling nature game!

Play Baboon