Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

nineleaf biscuitroot

Lomatium triternatum

Description:

Lomatium triternatum is a herb native to western North America. Common names for this plant include nineleaf biscuitroot or nineleaf desertparsley. It is a perennial herb and received the name "nineleaf" from the three leaflets that each have three more divisions. The umbel inflorescence is characteristic of the carrot family.

Habitat:

Found growing with big sagebrush, bitterbrush, lupine and various bluegrass and wheatgrass species.

Notes:

Nineleaf biscuitroot belongs in the carrot family (Apiaceae). Native Americans ate the root and used the leaves and seeds as spices.

Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

3 Comments

DerrickLK
DerrickLK 11 years ago

Thanks for the info drP! I had a hunch they were doing something along that line. You can see on the left side of the plant that the lowest cluster of seeds are all taken (I'm assuming by the ants).

drP
drP 11 years ago

I love the name biscuitroot--sounds tasty!
I don't know about this plant, but I know that ants harvest seeds from jimson weed and other plants, and these plants depend on the ants for seed dispersal.

DerrickLK
DerrickLK 11 years ago

In the second photo you can see harvester ants on the seeds. Anybody know what they are doing?

DerrickLK
Spotted by
DerrickLK

Idaho, USA

Spotted on Jun 22, 2012
Submitted on Jun 22, 2012

Related Spottings

Coastal Biscuitroot Wooly-Fruited Lomatium Columbia desert parsley Desert Parsley

Nearby Spottings

tent caterpillar desert horned lizard desert horned lizard Brown's peony
Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team