Animals & Nature

Balanophoraceae

plant family
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Also known as: Balanophora family

Balanophoraceae, the balanophora family of flowering plants (order Santalales), which includes 14 genera and about 40 species of root parasites that are distributed primarily throughout the tropics.

Physical description

The unusual club-shaped flower spikes of balanophora plants often resemble fungi in their appearance and in their emergence from the soil. The unisexual flowers range in colour from pale yellow to deep purple. The unlobed scalelike leaves lack the chlorophyll necessary for food production and are thus obligate parasitic plants, meaning they must obtain their nourishment by parasitizing other plants. Balanophoraceae species attach their tuberous rhizomes (underground stems) to the roots of host trees by means of highly modified roots (haustoria), through which water and nutrients pass from host to parasite.

Venus's-flytrap. Venus's-flytrap (Dionaea muscipula) one of the best known of the meat-eating plants. Carnivorous plant, Venus flytrap, Venus fly trap
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Plants: From Cute to Carnivorous

Major genera and species

Plants of the genera Balanophora (20 species) and Langsdorffia (4 species) contain an inflammable waxy material, and the stems have been used as candles in South America. The rhizomes of these plants are sometimes processed to produce wax, but the plants are not abundant enough for commercial wax production. Sometimes known as Peruvian Viagra, Corynaea crassa is used in folk medicine as an anti-inflammatory and aphrodisiac; it is the only member of its genus. Thonningia sanguinea, which is native to parts of tropical Africa, is traditionally used to treat a wide variety of ailments. Wood rose (Dactylanthus taylorii) is the only member of the family endemic to New Zealand and is pollinated by bats.

The remaining genera of the family are small, and many are monotypic (containing a single species). They are Chlamydophytum, Ditepalanthus, Lathrophytum, Lophophytum, Mystropetalon, Ombrophytum, RhopalocnemisSarcophyte, and Scybalium.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Melissa Petruzzello.