View allAll Photos Tagged Magnifica

Photo ID: 75960 MSC Magnifica

 

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Cruzeiro MSC Magnifica - Buenos Aires - Montevideo - Punta Del Este

Photo ID: 75957 MSC Magnifica

 

To follow more of my activities, please visit and join my facebook page:

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Cruzeiro MSC Magnifica - Buenos Aires - Montevideo - Punta Del Este

Photo taken from an invisible photograph.

Enzo Bonafe エンツォ・ボナフェ

Magnifica マニフィカ

 

Scotch Grain

Double Monk Strap

Inauguration du paquebot MSC Magnifica

Cruzeiro MSC Magnifica - Buenos Aires - Montevideo - Punta Del Este

Cruzeiro MSC Magnifica - Buenos Aires - Montevideo - Punta Del Este

Cairns Botanical Gardens, 13th June 09.

Medinilla magnifica is a a beautiful tropical evergreen epiphytic shrub grown for its lush foliage and huge panicles of pink flowers endemic to the Philippines.

 

Medinilla is a genus of about 150 species of flowering plants in the family Melastomataceae, native to tropical regions of the Old World from Africaeast through Madagascar and southern Asia to the western Pacific Ocean islands. The genus was named after J. de Medinilla, governor of the Mariana Islands in 1820.

Male Romaleid grasshopper, Agriacris magnifica.

 

Mindo, west slope of Andes, Ecuador

 

All images © James A. Christensen/PrimevalNature.com

 

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My specimen of this lovely species is growing only very slowly and is not very well. This is the best picture I have of it.

 

Salicaceae, China

Cruzeiro MSC Magnifica - Buenos Aires - Montevideo - Punta Del Este

Leaving Southampton 25.06.2018

Cruzeiro MSC Magnifica - Buenos Aires - Montevideo - Punta Del Este

Highlight Delft; Anemona Magnifica by Volkert van der Wijk [Berlageweg, Delft, 2/17/2023]

porque sera que el y superman nunca estan en el mismo sitio al tiempo?

Magnificent chromodoris

 

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de 15 litros de Champagne...🏆

2000-07 [9 cm pot]

This plant was bought from Succulent Tissue Culture (2008-02), as Haworthia magnifica var. magnifica. Now dead.

Best viewed @ large size

 

Oxalidaceae - Mexico; Oaxaca State, Mexico provenance of plant above

Oxalis

Shown: Detail of inflorescence displaying flower buds and flowers

 

"Oxalis (pronounced /ˈɒksəlɪs/) is by far the largest genus in the wood-sorrel family Oxalidaceae: of the approximately 900 known species in the Oxalidaceae, 800 belong here. The genus occurs throughout most of the world, except for the polar areas; species diversity is particularly rich in tropical Brazil, Mexico and South Africa.

 

"Many of the species are known as wood-sorrels (in American English typically written "woodsorrels" or "wood sorrels") as they have an acidic taste reminiscent of the unrelated sorrel (Rumex acetosa) proper. Some species are called yellow-sorrels or pink-sorrels after the color of their flowers instead. Other species are colloquially known as false shamrocks, and some are rather misleadingly called "sourgrasses".

 

"The flowers have five petals, which are usually fused at the base, and ten stamens. The petal color varies from white to pink, red or yellow; anthocyanins and xanthophylls may be present or absent but are generally not both present together in significant quantities, meaning that few wood-sorrels have bright orange flowers. The fruit is a small capsule containing several seeds. The roots are often tuberous and succulent, and several species also reproduce vegetatively by production of bulbils, which detach to produce new plants." (Wikipedia)

 

Photographed in U.C. Botanical Garden at Berkeley - Berkeley, California

  

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