Note: This is a project under development. The articles on this wiki are just being initiated and broadly incomplete. You can Help creating new pages.
Difference between revisions of "Oxalis stricta - Lemon clover"
Chaithrika (talk | contribs) m (Chaithrika moved page Lemon clover to Oxalis stricta: renaming as per convention) |
m (Prabhakar moved page Oxalis stricta to Lemon clover (Oxalis stricta)) |
(No difference)
|
Revision as of 13:19, 29 March 2018
Lemon clover, called the common yellow woodsorrel (or simply yellow woodsorrel), common yellow oxalis, upright yellow-sorrel, Oxalis stricta, or more ambiguously and informally "sourgrass"[1] or "pickle plant", is an herbaceous plant[2] native to North America, parts of Eurasia (including Southern India[not in citation given]), and has a rare introduction in Britain.[3] It tends to grow in woodlands, meadows, and in disturbed areas as both a perennial and annual.
Description
Commonly considered a weed of gardens, fields, and lawns, it grows in full sun or shade. The alternate leaves of this plant are divided into three heart-shaped leaflets (a typical trait of other species of Oxalis) that can grow up to 2 cm wide. These leaves curl up at night (exhibiting nyctinasty), and open in the day to perform photosynthesis. The mature seed capsules open explosively when disturbed (a very similar trait to that of the mature seed capsules or fruits of plants found in the genus Impatiens) and can disperse seeds up to 4 meters (about 13 feet) away. The flowers of the plant are hermaphroditic, blooming from July to October.
O. stricta generally requires dry or moist, alkaline soils, preferring sandy and loamy dirt to grow in. It requires well-drained soil and can grow in nutritionally poor grounds. It does not do well in shade.[3]
Uses
- The leaves and flowers of the plant are sometimes added to salads for decoration and flavoring. These can also be chewed raw (along with other parts of the plant, but not the root) as a thirst-quencher.[3] The green pods are pleasant raw, having a juicy crisp texture and a tartness similar to rhubarb in flavor.
- The leaves can be used to make a flavored drink that is similar in taste to lemonade, and the whole plant can be brewed as herbal tea that has an aroma somewhat like that of cooked green beans.
- The juices of the plant have been extracted from its greens as a substitute to common vinegar.
- An orange dye can be obtained by boiling the whole plant.
- A poultice of the plant has been used to treat dry mouth[clarification needed] and swellings.
Common name
- English - lemon clover