Mountain Death Camas
The mountain death camas spends much of the year underground as an onion-like corm, until the spring when it emerges as a beautiful, multi-flowered stalk. It is distinguishable from other death camas from the greenish-yellow markings on the petals, and as the name suggests, it is very poisonous to humans and livestock. This one was found growing in the Rocky Mountains, just east of Aspen, Colorado on a chilly subalpine June morning at about 9000 feet.
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- ©2017
- Image Size
- 4912x7360 / 17.6MB
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- Keywords
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A. elegans, Angiosperms, Anticlea, Anticlea elegans, Aspen, Colorado, Independence Pass, Liliaceae, Liliales, Melanthiaceae, Monocots, Pass, Pitkin County, Plantae, Rocky Mountains, Subalpine, Zigadenus elegans, alkali grass, alpine, alpine death camas, beautiful, beauty, bloom, blooming, blooms, blossom, blossoms, botany, bud, color, dangerous, deathcamas, elegant camas, flora, flower, flowers, forb, fresh, green, herb, monocot, mountain death camas, mountain deathcamas, native, natural, nature, perennial, plant, plants, poisonous, summer, toxic, whit, white camas, wild, wildflower, wildflowers
- Contained in galleries
- Melanthiaceae (Trillium and Death Camas Family), White Wildflowers