Attractive Seed Pod Plants: Growing Plants That Have Pretty Seeds

Purple Plants With Seed Pods

Image by MiaZeus

In the garden we plant colorful flowers and plants with different heights, colors, and textures but how about plants that have pretty seeds? Incorporating plants with attractive seed pods is as important as varying the size, shape, and color of plants in the landscape. Read on to learn about plants with interesting seed pods.

About Seed Pod Plants

Plants that produce true pods are members of the legume family. Peas
and beans
are well-known legumes, but other less familiar plants are also members of this
family, such as lupines and wisteria, whose blooms give way to bean-like
seed pods.

Other plants produce pod-like seed constructions that differ
botanically from legume seed pods. Capsules are one type, produced by blackberry
lilies
and poppies.
Poppy capsules are dark rounded pods with a ruffle on top. Inside the pod are
hundreds of tiny seeds that not only self-sow, but are delicious in a variety
of confections and dishes. Blackberry lily capsules are less showy, but the
seeds within look just like giant blackberries (hence the name).

The following is just a smattering of the unique seed pods
and other seed constructs available in the natural world.

Plants with Interesting Seed Pods

Many flowering plants have incredible looking seed pods or even pretty seeds. Take the Chinese lantern plant (Physalis alkekengi), for example, which produces papery orange husks. These husks gradually erode to create a lace-like netting surrounding an orange fruit with seeds inside.

Love-in-a-puff not only has a romantically
quirky sounding name, it produces a puffy seed pod that evolves from green to
red as it matures. Within the seedpod are individual seeds marked with a
cream-colored heart, eliciting its other common name of heartseed vine.

Both of these seed pod plants have attractive seed pods but
they’re just the tip of the iceberg. Some plants produce water thin seed pods.
The money
plant
(Lunaria annua), for
instance, has attractive seed pods that start off paper thin and lime-green. As
they mature, these fade to a papery silver color that shows off six black seeds
inside.

Other Plants with Pretty Seeds

The lotus
plant
has such attractive pods they are often found dried in floral
arrangements. The lotus is an aquatic plant native to Asia and is revered for
the large gorgeous flowers that bloom atop the water’s surface. Once the petals
fall, the large seed pod is revealed. Inside each hole of the seedpod is a
hard, round seed that falls out as the pod dries up

Ribbed fringepod (Thysanocarpus radians) is another plant that has pretty
seeds. This grass plant produces flat, green seed pods scalloped in pink.

Milkweed is the Monarch butterflies’ only food
source, but that isn’t its only claim to fame. Milkweed produces a fantastic
seed pod that is large, rather squishy, and contains dozens of seeds, each
attached to a silky thread rather like a dandelion
seed
. When the pods split, the seeds are carried away by the wind.

The love pea (Abrus
precatorius
) has really beautiful seeds. The seeds are prized in India
where the plant is native. The brilliantly red seeds are used for percussion
instruments and nothing else, as they are incredibly toxic.

Last, but not least, there are the attractive seed pods of the bushy seedbox or Ludwigia alternifolia. It is similar to a poppy seedpod, except the shape is definitely a box shape with a hole on top to shake out the seeds.

This article was last updated on 11/09/21
Read more about Seeds

In the garden we plant colorful flowers and plants with different heights, colors, and textures but how about plants that have pretty seeds? Incorporating plants with attractive seed pods is as important as varying the size, shape, and color of plants in the landscape. Read on to learn about plants with interesting seed pods.

About Seed Pod Plants

Plants that produce true pods are members of the legume family. Peas
and beans
are well-known legumes, but other less familiar plants are also members of this
family, such as lupines and wisteria, whose blooms give way to bean-like
seed pods.

Other plants produce pod-like seed constructions that differ
botanically from legume seed pods. Capsules are one type, produced by blackberry
lilies
and poppies.
Poppy capsules are dark rounded pods with a ruffle on top. Inside the pod are
hundreds of tiny seeds that not only self-sow, but are delicious in a variety
of confections and dishes. Blackberry lily capsules are less showy, but the
seeds within look just like giant blackberries (hence the name).

The following is just a smattering of the unique seed pods
and other seed constructs available in the natural world.

Plants with Interesting Seed Pods

Many flowering plants have incredible looking seed pods or even pretty seeds. Take the Chinese lantern plant (Physalis alkekengi), for example, which produces papery orange husks. These husks gradually erode to create a lace-like netting surrounding an orange fruit with seeds inside.

Love-in-a-puff not only has a romantically
quirky sounding name, it produces a puffy seed pod that evolves from green to
red as it matures. Within the seedpod are individual seeds marked with a
cream-colored heart, eliciting its other common name of heartseed vine.

Both of these seed pod plants have attractive seed pods but
they’re just the tip of the iceberg. Some plants produce water thin seed pods.
The money
plant
(Lunaria annua), for
instance, has attractive seed pods that start off paper thin and lime-green. As
they mature, these fade to a papery silver color that shows off six black seeds
inside.

Other Plants with Pretty Seeds

The lotus
plant
has such attractive pods they are often found dried in floral
arrangements. The lotus is an aquatic plant native to Asia and is revered for
the large gorgeous flowers that bloom atop the water’s surface. Once the petals
fall, the large seed pod is revealed. Inside each hole of the seedpod is a
hard, round seed that falls out as the pod dries up

Ribbed fringepod (Thysanocarpus radians) is another plant that has pretty
seeds. This grass plant produces flat, green seed pods scalloped in pink.

Milkweed is the Monarch butterflies’ only food
source, but that isn’t its only claim to fame. Milkweed produces a fantastic
seed pod that is large, rather squishy, and contains dozens of seeds, each
attached to a silky thread rather like a dandelion
seed
. When the pods split, the seeds are carried away by the wind.

The love pea (Abrus
precatorius
) has really beautiful seeds. The seeds are prized in India
where the plant is native. The brilliantly red seeds are used for percussion
instruments and nothing else, as they are incredibly toxic.

Last, but not least, there are the attractive seed pods of the bushy seedbox or Ludwigia alternifolia. It is similar to a poppy seedpod, except the shape is definitely a box shape with a hole on top to shake out the seeds.

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