Unlike some other Ledebouria species, both the leaves and bulb scales of L. revoluta have threads when torn.
[5] The scaly bulb of L. revoluta had potential antibacterial (against both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria) and antifungal activity.
[6] Micropropagation of Ledebouria revoluta through callus culture and indirect somatic embryogenesis[5] as well as shoot organogenesis[6] was well established.
[5] Detail cytological studies of sporophytic and gametophytic generation of Ledebouria revoluta was made by Haque and Ghosh (2016).
[7] Ledebouria is named for Carl Friedrich von Ledebour (1785-1851),[8] a botanist who published, among other things, the first complete Russian flora.