Plants in Israel: Caper berry

Capparis decidua, Capparis aphylla, Caper berry, Caper plant, Wild caper,

Hebrew: צלף רותמי, Arabic: حنبوق , تندب , سوداد

Scientific name:   Capparis decidua (Forssk.) Edgew.
Synonym name:   Capparis aphylla Roth
Common name:   Caper berry, Caper plant, Wild caper
Hebrew name:   צלף רותמי
Arabic name:   حنبوق , تندب , سوداد
Family:   Capparaceae, Caper family, צלפיים


Life form:   Many-branched shrub or small tree
Stems:   Leafless green crooked spiny branches slender, smooth, terete and spinous; mature branches are leafless as leaves are present only on young shoots; small, sharp, straight, light brown spines occur in pair at each node of twig; most twigs and branches are glossy and dark green in colour, but with age, bark develops which is whitish gray
Leaves:   On young branches, caduceus, linear, 1-2 cm long, apex short, stiff, pale mucro like pickle, petioles very short, stipular thorns long, sharp, straight orange yellow
Inflorescence:   Corymb with many flowers arising from old branches or from short lateral shoots, in the axils of the spines
Flowers:   Red or pink, rarely yellow; Petals: Pink, red-veined, narrow-oblong; Gynophore about 12 mm long; Androecium 8 stamens, inserted at the base of gynophores; Pedicel lender and about 12 mm in length
Fruits / pods:   Small, globular, glabrous, fleshy berry, beaked at the apex, resembling a cherry in shape and size; fresh berries are green, which turn pink on ripening and blackish on drying
Flowering Period:   May, June, July, August, September, October
Habitat:   Desert
Distribution:   Judean desert, Dead Sea valley, Negev hills
Chorotype:   Sudanian
Summer shedding:   Perennating


Derivation of the botanical name:

Capparis (latin), borrowed from Greek kapparis [κάππαρις], whose origin is unknown but probably West or Central Asia (Alkabara, kabar). Another theory links kapparis to the name of the island Cyprus (Kypros [Κύπρος]), where capers grow abundantly. Arabic kafara, to be hairy, villous.

decidua, deciduus, “falling off at maturity” or “tending to fall off.”
aphylla, without leaves.
The Hebrew name: צלף, tzalaf, zalaph, which in the Bible is a proper name (Nehemia 3:30). The caper’s fruit, the evyonah, is mentioned in Ecclesiastes 12:5 as a symbol of shortness of man’s life, because very soon after it blossoms, the fruit scatters its seeds and the plant withers; “The almond-tree shall blossom… and the caperberry shall fail; Because man goeth to his long home….”

  • The standard author abbreviation Forssk. is used to indicate Peter Forsskål (1732 – 1763), a Swedish explorer, orientalist and naturalist.
  • The standard author abbreviation Edgew. is used to indicate Michael Pakenham Edgeworth (1812 – 1881), an Irish botanist who specialized in seed plants and ferns,[1] and spent most of his life and work in India.
  • The standard author abbreviation Roth is used to indicate Albrecht Wilhelm Roth (1757 – 1834), a German physician and botanist.