Leighton Photography & Imaging

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Desert Broomrape

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Because the parasitic desert broomrape doesn't use chlorophyll like most all plants to convert sunlight and carbon dioxide into food, it doesn't need to be green. Instead, this oddly beautiful plant steals nutrients from neighboring plants and has a rather fond taste for asters, such as the sunflowers are common in the desert. This one was found growing in Western Texas near the Rio Grande River.

Copyright
©2015
Image Size
3365x5048 / 12.5MB
Keywords
Angiosperms, Aphyllon cooperi, Asterids, Big Bend National Park, Brewster County, Chihuahuan Desert, Cooper's broom rape, Cooper's broomrape, Eudicots, Lamiales, Myzorrhiza cooperi, O. cooperi, Orobanchaceae, Orobanche, Orobanche cooperi, Orobanche cooperi ssp. cooperi, Orobanche cooperi ssp. latiloba, Orobanche ludoviciana var. cooperi, Orobanche ludoviciana var. latiloba, Texas, annual, beautiful, beauty, broom rape, broom-rape, broomrape, burroweed strangler, desert, desert broomrape, dicot, environment, flor de tierra, flora, forb, herb, herbaceous, myco-heterotrophs, mycotroph, mycotrophic, natural, nature, oddball, parasitic, plant, purple, saprophyte, sert broomrape, southwest, spike broomrape, spring, wild, wilderness, wildflower
Contained in galleries
Orobanchaceae (Indian Paintbrushes and Broomrapes)
Because the parasitic desert broomrape doesn't use chlorophyll like most all plants to convert sunlight and carbon dioxide into food, it doesn't need to be green. Instead, this oddly beautiful plant steals nutrients from neighboring plants and has a rather fond taste for asters, such as the sunflowers are common in the desert. This one was found growing in Western Texas near the Rio Grande River.