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

Whipcord Cobra Lily

Arisaema tortuosum

Description:

The names comes from its cobra like appearance, with a whip-like tongue, upto 12" long, rising up vertically. Native to open Rhododendron forests, scrub and alpine meadows in the Himalaya from India to western China. The thick 4' tall fleshy petiole (stalk) emerges in early June, adorned by two tropical looking palmate green leaves near the top. As the leaves unfurl, the pitcher that tops the stem opens to reveal a green Jack-in-the-pulpit flower, but with a whip-like tongue that extends from the mouth of the flower upwards to 12 or more inches. In autumn, bright red berries ripen on the tall stem of those plants that have set seed. This wonderful plant for the woodland garden starts out about 50 cm tall, but it can eventually attain 2 m and form large clumps. Native from the Himalaya and western China to southern India and Myanmar (Burma), it is highly variable, as one might expect. Sometimes the spadix-appendage is green, other times it is purple.

Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

No Comments

ChimeTsetan
Spotted by
ChimeTsetan

Himachal Pradesh, India

Spotted on Jun 25, 2012
Submitted on Jun 25, 2012

Related Spottings

Jack in the Pulpit Jack-in-the-pulpit Jack-in-the-Pulpit Jack In The Pulpit

Nearby Spottings

Grey Bushchat Streaked Laughingthrush Red-headed Bullfinch Red-billed Blue Magpie
Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team