Prostrate or scrambling shrubs, sometimes hanging from the rocks, glabrous, glaucous, often fleshy with short crooked branches.
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Diego Rivera and his colleagues discovered that the proper name for our caper (displayed in the photographs) is Capparis inermis Forssk. However, since the name ...
Cartilage Caper is a scrambling shrub which grows by spreading or scrambling over rocks. It has long, hairless stems which are typically bent and twisted, ...
The native range of this species is Egypt to Tanzania, W. Asia to NW. India, Arabian Peninsula, W. Indian Ocean. It is a subshrub or shrub and grows ...
Capparis cartilaginea
CC extract and tea have shown to possess a significant antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effect, which can partially explain their traditional medicinal use.
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A low, scrambling, often prostate, spiny shrub, rarely to 4 m tall. The bright red, pulpy fruits are edible. Capparis cartilaginea is widely distributed in ...
The plant is harvested from the wild for local use as a food and a medicine. Only the uses specifically ascribed to this subspecies are recorded here.
Capparis cartilaginea grows in deciduous, evergreem and semi-desert open bushland, on clffs, rocky slopes and sandy soil at elevations up to 1500 m and on ...
Oct 19, 2023 · CC extract and tea have shown to possess a significant antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effect, which can partially explain their traditional medicinal use.
Capparis cartilaginea Decne. Published in: Decne. (1835). In: Ann. Sci. Nat., Bot., Sér. 2, 3: 273.