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Lamourouxia multifida

Lamourouxia multifida, with no commonly accepted English name, is a mostly Mexican species of perennial herbaceous plant', which is partly parasitic on the roots of other plants. It belongs to the family Orobanchaceae.

Description

Lamourouxia multifida is a handsome wildflower exhibiting the following features:

  • Usually its stems are unbranched, and reaching up to 1.5 meters long (~5 feet).
  • Leaves up to 6 cm long (~2⅕ inches) rise opposite one another with blades twice divided (bipinnate) into slender segments.
  • Flowers with bright red corollas are of irregular form (zygomorphic) and up to 5 cm long (~2 inches); there are 4 fertile stamens, and the style is longer than the corola.
  • Fruits are capsules up to 11 mm long (~⅖ inch).

Distribution

Lamourouxia multifida occurs throughout most of upland Mexico, into Guatemala.

Habitat

In the Valley of Mexico, Lamourouxia multifida inhabits pine-oak forest and grasslands at elevations of 2250–3450 meters (~7400-11,300 feet). On this page, images show an individual growing on the face of a roadcut through limestone at an elevation of about 2300 meters (7500 feet).

Human uses

In traditional medicine

In the Mexican state of Michoacán, Lamourouxia multifida is used by traditional healers during limpias in order to bring the body, mind and spirit back into balance, especially by eliminating negative energies. In the state of Morelos the inflorescence is recognized as medicinal.

As an ornamental

Sometimes Lamourouxia multifida is used to adorn altars during religious ceremonies.

In beekeeping

In various Mexican states it is known to attract honeybees. In fact, one of the common names in Spanish for Lamourouxia multifida is Chupamiel Milhojas, roughly translatable to "thousand-leaf honey-sucker."

Ecology

Rivoli's hummingbird, Eugenes fulgens, and Lucifer sheartail, Calothorax lucifer, have been documented visiting Lamourouxia multifida.

In an area of dry scrubland in the highland Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt it's been documented that hummingbirds visit Lamourouxia multifida flowers in August, then from September into November shift to flowers of Lamourouxia dasyantha. Another study, also in the volcanic belt, at Jardines del Pedregal, Mexico City, indicates that the flowering time of Lamourouxia multifida is from early September to mid November.

Taxonomy

Aimé Bonpland and Alexander von Humboldt first scientifically collected Lamourouxia multifida at a temperate elevation between Guanajuato and nearby Santa Rosa de la Sierra, in September 1803. In 1818 it was formally described by Carl Sigismund Kunth.

Etymology

The genus name Lamourouxia is a New Latin construct honoring Jean Vincent Félix Lamouroux, an early Professor of Natural History in Caen, France.

The species name multifida is from Latin multifidus, meaning "much divided," in reference to the leaves' many slender divisions.

Gallery

References