Photographer's Note
Chorão-das-praias (Carpobrotus edulis)
The common name Ice Plant refers to Carpobrotus edulis, a creeping, mat-forming succulent species, and member of the Stone Plant family Aizoaceae, one of about 30 species in the genus Carpobrotus. It is also known as the Highway Ice Plant, Pigface or Hottentot Fig and in South Africa as the Sour Fig, on account of its edible fruit. It was previously classified in genus Mesembryanthemum and is sometimes referred to by this name.
Carpobrotus edulis is easily confused with its close relative, the more diminutive and less aggressive Carpobrotus chilensis (sea fig), and the two species hybridize readily throughout their ranges in California. The large 2.5 to 6 inch diameter flowers of C. edulis are yellow or light pink, whereas the smaller, 1.5 to 2.5 inch diameter C. chilensis flowers are deep magenta. Large cells in the leaves sparkle like granules of ice in the sun, giving the plant its common name. The common name "Ice Plant" is sometimes also used for other related plant species, including Delosperma cooperi and Lampranthus, which also belong to the plant family Aizoaceae and share in common a South African origin. The name is, unfortunately, used for plants in other families, as well, including Sedum spectabile (Crassulaceae).
The Ice Plant is a native of South Africa. In the early 1900s C. edulis was brought to California from South Africa to stabilize soil along railroad tracks and was later put to use by Caltrans for similar purposes. Thousands of acres were planted in California until the 1970s. It easily spreads by seed (hundreds per fruit) and from segmentation (any shoot segment can produce roots). Its succulent foliage, bright magenta or yellow flowers, and resistance to some harsh coastal climatic conditions (salt) have also made it a favoured garden plant. The Ice Plant was for several decades widely promoted as an ornamental plant, and it is still available at some nurseries. Ice Plant foliage can turn a vibrant red to yellow in color.
GottaCarpeDiem, ribeiroantonio, tico_tic, arcy, ruisc_pt ha contrassegnato questa nota come utile
Critiques | Translate
GottaCarpeDiem
(190) 2007-03-21 7:42
Hi Hugo :)
What a simle and crisp composition using great colour. Perhaps too bright on the leaves in the foreground but good contrast between sand , plant , and sky. Well done.
My compliments,
*** Ursula ***
rgarrigus
(0) 2007-03-21 8:23
Hugo,
This is cool and very well composed. I haven't even experimented with using fill flash yet but this one will serve as a reference for me.
ribeiroantonio
(22730) 2007-03-21 17:56
Tens aqui uma bonita foto e um tema pouco visto por aqui. Essas plantas são muito giras e têm também uma flor linda. Há muito disso nas praias do Mussulo, em Angola, etambém por aqui na Austrália.
Será que precisavas de ter usado o flash? É que, como podes ver, tens dois níveis diferentes de luz, o que não ajuda muito.
Quanto á nota, foste tu que a escreveste? Caso contrário, seria bom incluir sempre a referência.
Finalmente, 13 críticas num só dia foi um esforço excelente. Continua assim se queres ter sucesso aqui no TE.
Um abraço,
António
arcy (0) 2007-03-23 8:38
Cá está Hugo
Prometes.. e vais longe...
Estou como o António..."eles que se cuidem"
ruisc_pt
(11594) 2007-06-14 14:54
Já tinha visto esta antes de a ter "posto" aqui no TE
O flash resultou em grande.
Um ab.
kerusso
(112) 2008-08-10 21:17
Lol, I actually stole one of those little plants from a state park on the northern California coast. Nice to know the name. Great picture. A little over exposed, but otherwise, well done!
Photo Information
-
Copyright: Hugo Pereira (peixotox)
(100)
- Genre: Luoghi
- Medium: Colore
- Date Taken: 2005-10-16
- Categories: Natura
- Details: (Fill) Flash: Yes
- Versione Foto: Versione Originale
- Date Submitted: 2007-03-21 7:37