Ember Turnip (Root Plant)
The Ember Turnip is a wild and farmed small plant in the Dark Wood Forest. With the Ember Turnip named after fire from it colour orange and white colour also sometimes called the Fire Turnip. The Ember Turnip grow through summer in the dry hot air.
Basic Information
Anatomy
It is a small around ball shape that a mix of white and ora at the end with the plant body growing out with dark green
Biological Traits
The wild and farmed is same type as they are gathered from the wild to be framed in summer. Some people do farm the Ember Turnip all year
Genetics and Reproduction
Ember Turnip grows flowers in later summer after it is fully grown it can also grow all year but it takes two months to full grow and flower through summer.
Growth Rate & Stages
It takes two months for the Ember Turnip to be fully and later flower in late summer. Ember Turnip takes two weeks in grow above the soil taking eight weeks to fully grown with the plant living for more than months more in the ground.
Ecology and Habitats
The Ember Turnip loves to live in hot, dry areas in the Dark Wood Forest with some need to water also ok with water after it's out of the ground. Older Ember Turnip can easy live trough a lot of water.
Biological Cycle
They grow mostly the same in every season with the cold only slowing down grow a little. When it come to summer when it's hot and dry the Ember Turnip is everywhere.
Additional Information
Domestication
Seeds are taken from the wild for summer growing season but some grow the Ember Turnip all year make little diferent from the wild ones there are big and live long.
Uses, Products & Exploitation
They are grown of their root that grows into ball shape food used in a range of different cooking.
Civilization and Culture
History
They always been easy to find food in the wild being place in a lot of cooking.
Lifespan
four months
Conservation Status
The Ember Turnip mostly farmed with some grown the wild in summer where they grow in the high sun area or dry areas.
Average Height
20-30cm
Geographic Distribution
Related Ethnicities
Comments