Adenium boehmianum
SPECIMEN · FROM THE LIBRARY
Adenium boehmianum

Adenium Boehmianum

ON THIS PLANT

Adenium boehmianum, the Bushman poison, is a poisonous succulent endemic to the mostly dry regions of northern Namibia and southern Angola. The San people boil the root sap and latex to prepare arrow poison, which is sufficient for hunting large mammals, as it contains strong cardiotoxic effects. The leaves, borne only for three months a year, are arranged spirally and are clustered near the branch tips. A plant will flower for only a few weeks in winter. The oblong fruit releases many seeds through a longitudinal slit, which due to their lateral tufts, can be dispersed by wind.

CHARACTERISTICS

Botanical profile.

Genus
Adenium
Family
Apocynaceae
ALSO KNOWN AS

Other names.

en Bushman's-poison
PLATES
Adenium boehmianum leaf
PLATE 01 · leaf
Adenium boehmianum leaf
PLATE 02 · leaf
Adenium boehmianum flower
PLATE 03 · flower
Adenium boehmianum bark
PLATE 04 · bark
Adenium boehmianum habit
PLATE 05 · habit
ALSO IN THE LIBRARY

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