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Revision as of 09:07, 19 August 2011 by Wik (Talk | contribs) (Wild Plants)

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Domesticated Plants

Food Plants

  • Meacan - A purplish-brown root crop with broad, heart-shaped purplish-green leaves, its tuberous root often grows larger than a Pyracani's head. Used for Zik feed.
  • Piorra - An intensely-flavored fruit whose main use on Pyracan for centuries was to ferment it into a potent alcohol in which to preserve meat. In 2468 CE, a Hekayti calling herself 'Praell' began selling a subtle piorra wine to offworlders and made a large profit.

Wild Plants

Herbivorous Plants

  • Biorr – Around 20 species of bamboo-like plants that make up the upper canopy of temperate forests across Pyracan. Rising 20 to 120 feet in height, they feature thin, pole-like tan growth, short horizontal ladder-like branches, spear-like lime green leaves, and the ability to grow more than ten feet in a year. Extremely long taproots and a tendency to grow in dense thickets prevent the otherwise precarious plants from toppling.

Trees

  • Preas – With ribbed bark and trunks that extend more than eighty feet, these tree-ferns end in a tuft of bright green fronds around thirty feet in width. Preas make up the upper canopy of most jungles across the equator, with a variety of plants and animals digging within its bark and xylem to make their homes. Peach-colored spores gather yearly on the undersides of the fronds during the windy season to be blown skyward.


Vines

  • Ealaidh - Stretching for hundreds of yards and growing roots wherever it touches the ground, this forest dweller tends to spread wherever it can find some sun, often choking out other vegetation as it covers an area. Each of its flowers is made up of five pearl-frosted green spade-shaped petals with a small central sphere that looks almost exactly like a pinkish-white pearl.
  • Saighead - Featuring large white, wine glass-shaped flowers on a thick, parasitic vine that attaches itself to preas trees, they exist in tight harmony with puinsean, who both pollinate their flowers and poison the gallons of water that the cupped petals contain. In return, the puinsean gets water for flight and eats some of the bugs that the saighead’s water kills. In ages past, jungle Pyracani soaked their underwater fencing in the water from these poisoned pools so as to protect their unguli against predators.