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Nona Makan Sirih ( Clerodendrum thomsoniae )
Nona Makan Sirih in Indonesian or Clerodendrum thomsoniae is a species of flowering plant in the genus
Clerodendrum of the family Lamiaceae, native to tropical west Africa
from Cameroon west to Senegal. This flower have An unambiguous common name is bleeding glory-bower; terms like
"Glory-bower", "Bagflower" or "Bleeding-heart vine" are also often
encountered but can refer to any of the roughly 400 species of
Clerodendrum. In some regions it has escaped from cultivation and become
naturalised.
Nona Makan Sirih ( Clerodendrum thomsoniae )
Nona Makan Sirih ( Clerodendrum thomsoniae )
It is an evergreen liana growing to 4 m (13 ft) tall, with ovate to oblong leaves 8–17 cm (3–7 in) cm long. The flowers are produced in cymes of 8-20 together, each flower with a pure white to pale purple five-lobed calyx 2.5 cm in diameter, and a red five-lobed corolla 2 cm long and in diameter.
It is grown as an ornamental plant for its decorative two-coloured flowers. With a minimum temperature of 10–13 °C (50–55 °F), in temperate areas it requires shelter and a frost-free environment. This plant has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.
The plant was named at the request of Rev. William Cooper Thomson (1829-22 March 1878), a missionary and physician in Nigeria, in honor of his late first wife. This plant was very popular during the mid 19th century under the name "beauty bush". It lost favour only when its unusual culture conditions were forgotten. Specifically, its root system must be partially submerged in water most of the time, and it wants very good light.
Scientific classification of Nona makan Sirih:
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Eudicots
(unranked): Asterids
Order: Lamiales
Family: Verbenaceae (or Lamiaceae)
Genus: Clerodendrum
Species: C. thomsoniae
Binomial name: Clerodendrum thomsoniae
Balf.
Sources by : Wikipedia
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