Jem's Birding & Ringing Exploits in the Eastern Province and elsewhere in Saudi Arabia
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20 February 2018
Desert Hyacynth - Haradh
Whilst birdwatching in Haradh I saw a small
number of new Desert Hyacinth Cistanche
tubulosa. The Desert Hyacinth is a widely distributed annual that produces
a dense pyramid spike of bright yellow flowers topped by maroon-tinted buds.
The yellow flowers do not smell very nice and flies are attracted to the smell
and carry the pollen on their legs from plant to plant helping with
pollination. They are parasitic, one of several such plants in Arabia, and live
off other plants to gain their nutritional needs, as they have no green parts
or leaves to synthesize chlorophyll directly. The many tiny seeds may remain
dormant for years until the roots of the host plant are close enough to trigger
germination. It is one of the showiest plants of Eastern Arabia with bright
yellow, dense column of flowers sometimes approaching one metre in height. It
has varying flower colour with the flowers either tightly packed in the spike
or loose. They are widespread on sandy or sandy-silty ground and can tolerate
saline environments as well as disturbed conditions, so are often seen growing
near roads or tracks in the desert or along the shores of the Arabian Gulf.