Mayapple(Mandrake)
- Plant Type: This is a herbaceous
plant, it is a perennial which can reach 45cm in height
(18inches).
- Leaves: The leaf arrangement is
opposite. . There can be one or two leaves. Only plants
with two leaves flower. Each shiny, yellow green, umbrella
like leaf is deeply lobed.
- Flowers: The flowers have 6 Regular
Parts and are up to 5cm wide (2 inches). They are white.
Blooms first appear in mid spring and continue into
late spring. Thought most plants have 6 petals some
have up to nine.
- Fruit: A berry which looks much
like a lime. See 'Other Images' below.
- Habitat: Rich woods where there
is an open canopy and sometimes in seasonally mowed
areas.
- Range: Throughout the southeast.

Mayapples usually grow in groups and the shiny,
slightly unusual leaf color makes them very distinctive
and easy to spot. The flowers, on the other hand, hang
below the leaves and must be looked for.
Lore: The fruit is edible when
ripe but all other parts of the plant are
toxic. The Native Americans may have
used a powdered root preparation as an insecticide
on their crops and soaked seeds in a decoction to protect
them from pests.
Warning: All parts of the plant except the
ripe fruit are extremly toxic. The root, which is easily
powered, is a powerful eye irritant.
Medical Uses: Although too poisonous
to use in home remedies this plant has many medical
uses. Native Americans used the root as a strong laxative,
to treat worms and for numerous other things. The root
is currently used in cancer medications and may have
commercial potential as a cultivated plant. There are
accounts of the Indians use of the root tocommit suicide
with death occurring in just hours. The size of the
lethal dose is unclear.

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