Saturday, August 30, 2014

Smooth Camas: White and Green Saskatchewan Wildflowers

Smooth Camas.  Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved
Smooth Camas with fly.  © SB
A stand of Smooth Camas blooms in a wet hollow by the side of the road, stems of white, green and yellow flowers swaying gently in the wind.

Another first for me — I've never seen this prairie and parkland wildflower before, and was lucky to see so many at once. (The flowers usually appear in June, so I'm glad these native plants were still showing off their display in mid-July.)

These lily-shaped flowers grow on stalks a foot or two tall — typically in moist areas, though in some dry meadows, too — and, from my (limited) observation, seem to be highly attractive to insects of all kinds!

One of my guides (Royer/Dickinson) calls this plant, with its graceful, arching stalks of flowers, White Camas, and its formal name is Zigadenus elegans. This guide says this Camas is slightly poisonous to humans and livestock, while the related dry-hillside Death Camas or Zigadenus venenosus — no surprise with a name like that! — is very poisonous.

Smooth Camas.  Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved
Close-up of single Smooth Camas flower.  © SB

Smooth Camas.  Copyright © Shelley Banks, all rights reserved
Smooth Camas with mosquito  © SB 


Prairie Wildflower: Smooth Camas
Location: Near Muenster, Saskatchewan,  Canada.  
Photo Date: July 13 and 14, 2014.  

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