Hydnora visseri, as a holoparasitic plant, lacks chlorophyll and depends entirely on its hosts,
Euphorbia gregaria or
E. gummifera, for all water and nutrition.
H. visseri lacks leaves and roots. The vegetative body of the plant is a brown warty
rhizome that spreads laterally through the soil. The bumps on the rhizome of
Hydnora spp. can differentiate into
haustoria (specialized organs for parasitizing the host plant), flower buds, or bifurcations of the rhizome. The rhizomes when broken are reddish to pink and contain high levels of tannins. The only portion of the plant that emerges from the soil surface is the large fleshy flower. The
pollination of Visser's hydnora involves a trap and release mechanism where
dermestid beetles are detained for several days, then released dusted with
pollen. The fruit is a large berry with thousands of small (< 1mm diameter) seeds, and is usually buried or just at the soil surface. == Taxonomy ==