Harpagonella palmeri A.Gray is a plant in the Boraginaceae family, order Boraginales, kingdom Plantae. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Harpagonella palmeri A.Gray (Harpagonella palmeri A.Gray)
🌿 Plantae

Harpagonella palmeri A.Gray

Harpagonella palmeri A.Gray

Harpagonella is a North American borage genus of small annuals, known for its distinctive hooked spiny fruit.

Family
Genus
Harpagonella
Order
Boraginales
Class
Magnoliopsida
⚠️ Toxicity Note

Insufficient toxicity evidence; avoid direct contact and ingestion.

About Harpagonella palmeri A.Gray

Harpagonella is a genus of flowering plants in the borage family, commonly called grappling-hooks, a name that refers to the appearance and function of their fruits. Their unusual fruits consist of two small nutlets enclosed in a bur-like calyx, which is covered in many spines that each bear tiny hooked barbs. These are small annual plants that produce small white flowers, and they grow in sandy, clayey, and gravelly soils. The genus is native to North America, where it occurs in southern California, southern Arizona, northern Sonora, and the Baja California peninsula. It is considered one of the most morphologically unique genera in the subtribe Amsinckiinae, a distinction that comes mostly from its unusual fruit structure. The genus was previously thought to contain only one species, but plants native to Arizona have now been recognized as a separate species.

Photo: (c) jrebman, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by jrebman · cc-by-nc

Taxonomy

Plantae Tracheophyta Magnoliopsida Boraginales Boraginaceae Harpagonella

More from Boraginaceae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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