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Lythraceae (Lythrum, or loosestrife family) » Ammannia baccifera
am-MAH-nee-uh -- named for Paul Ammann, German botanist
bak-IF-er-uh -- meaning, bearing berries
commonly known as: acrid weed, blistering ammania , monarch redstem, tooth cup • Bengali: বনমরিচ banmarich • Hindi: अगिन बूटी aginbuti, बन मिरिच ban mirich, दादमारी dadmari, जंगली मेंहदी jungli mehendi • Kannada: ಕಾಡುಗಿಡ kaadugida • Konkani: दादमार्या dadmaria • Malayalam: kallur vanchi, nirumelneruppu • Marathi: अगीनबुटी aginbuti, भरजांभूळ bharajambhula, दादमारी dadmari • Nepalese: अम्बार ambar • Punjabi: dadarbooti • Sanskrit: अग्निगार्भ agnigarbha, ब्राह्मसोम brahmasoma, क्षेत्रभूषा kshetrabhusha, क्षेत्रवशिनी kshetravashini, महाश्याम mahasyama, पाषाणभेद pasanabheda • Tamil: கல்லுருவி kal-l-uruvi • Telugu: అగ్నివేండపాకు agnivendapaku
Native to: India
References: eFlora • Floristic Survey of Institute of Science
Que conte muitos, cheios de saúde e alegria, minha amiga!
Fitolaca/ American Pokeweed (Phytolacca americana)
Muito obrigada à Raquel (Avó Quéu) pela identificação!
Nome vulgar: Fitolaca; Tintureira; Cachos-de-raposa.
It's a large herbaceous perennial plant growing up to 10 feet (3 meters) in height native to eastern North America.
It is also known as American nightshade, cancer jalap, coakum, garget, inkberry, pigeon berry, pocan bush, poke root, pokeweed, redweed, scoke, red ink plant and chui xu shang lu (in Chinese medicine).
Parts of this plant are highly toxic to livestock and humans, and it is considered a major pest by farmers. Nonetheless, some parts can be used as food, medicine or poison. The plant has a large white taproot, green or red stems, and large, simple leaves. White flowers are followed by purple to almost black berries, which are a good food source for songbirds such as Northern Cardinal, Brown Thrasher, and Northern Mockingbird.
It really caught my eye.
Foto tirada no Parque Biológico de Gaia durante o meeting do grupo Aves em Portugal
Photo taken during the meeting of Aves em Portugal (Birds in Portugal) group, in Parque Biológico de Gaia, Portugal
Post-fire sagebrush steppe vegetation in the region of northeastern Nevada includes much more than Bromus tectorum. Erodium cicutarium and Sisymbrium altissimum are often more abundant, and native species of Argemone, Asclepias, Elymus, Lygodesmia, Poa, and Tetradymia, for example, are common. Such sites are perhaps degraded such that cheatgrass can't compete but then this argues against a cheatgrass-fire cycle.
April 3, 2023 - Redstem Stork's Bill at Poppy Hill Superbloom in Perris, CA. Photo Shoot with my Mom, Aunt Evangeline Lao, Aunt Lucy Luna, and Aunt Flora Lustado.
Post-fire sagebrush steppe vegetation in the region of northeastern Nevada includes much more than Bromus tectorum. Erodium cicutarium and Sisymbrium altissimum are often more abundant, and native species of Argemone, Asclepias, Elymus, Lygodesmia, Poa, and Tetradymia, for example, are common. Such sites are perhaps degraded such that cheatgrass can't compete but then this argues against a cheatgrass-fire cycle. This site wasn't all that degraded because it was covered with sagebrush steppe until this fire that occurred a few years before this photo was taken.
In this three quarter view, at far right by the staircase is a rosemary shrub. Emerald gaiety euonymus is in the gravel at the base of the stone wall. Above it is common purple sage and to its left is one end of the row of lavender Munstead, about to bloom. To the right rear of the sage, barely visible are the pink purple flowers of common chives. To the right rear of the topiary dogwood is a somewhat short bronze fennel, host to a very fat black swallowtail larva in the shape of a black and white striped caterpillar.
Post-fire sagebrush steppe vegetation in the region of northeastern Nevada includes much more than Bromus tectorum. Erodium cicutarium and Sisymbrium altissimum are often more abundant, and native species of Argemone, Asclepias, Elymus, Lygodesmia, Poa, and Tetradymia, for example, are common. Such sites are perhaps degraded such that cheatgrass can't compete but then this argues against a cheatgrass-fire cycle.
Post-fire sagebrush steppe vegetation in the region of northeastern Nevada includes much more than Bromus tectorum. Erodium cicutarium and Sisymbrium altissimum are often more abundant, and native species of Argemone, Asclepias, Elymus, Lygodesmia, Poa, and Tetradymia, for example, are common. Such sites are perhaps degraded such that cheatgrass can't compete but then this argues against a cheatgrass-fire cycle.
Lythraceae (Lythrum, or loosestrife family) » Ammannia baccifera
am-MAH-nee-uh -- named for Paul Ammann, German botanist
bak-IF-er-uh -- meaning, bearing berries
commonly known as: ammannia, acrid weed, blistering ammania , monarch redstem, tooth cup • Bengali: বনমরিচ banmarich • Hindi: अगिन बूटी aginbuti, बन मिरिच ban mirich, दादमारी dadmari, जंगली मेंहदी jungli mehendi • Kannada: ಕಾಡುಗಿಡ kaadugida • Konkani: दादमार्या dadmaria • Malayalam: kallur vanchi, nirumelneruppu • Marathi: अगीनबुटी aginbuti, भरजांभूळ bharajambhula, दादमारी dadmari • Nepalese: अम्बार ambar • Punjabi: dadarbooti • Sanskrit: अग्निगार्भ agnigarbha, ब्राह्मसोम brahmasoma, क्षेत्रभूषा kshetrabhusha, क्षेत्रवशिनी kshetravashini, महाश्याम mahasyama, पाषाणभेद pasanabheda • Tamil: கல்லுருவி kal-l-uruvi • Telugu: అగ్నివేండపాకు agnivendapaku
Native to: India
References: eFlora • Floristic Survey of Institute of Science
Post-fire sagebrush steppe vegetation in the region of northeastern Nevada includes much more than Bromus tectorum. Erodium cicutarium and Sisymbrium altissimum are often more abundant, and native species of Argemone, Asclepias, Elymus, Lygodesmia, Poa, and Tetradymia, for example, are common. Such sites are perhaps degraded such that cheatgrass can't compete but then this argues against a cheatgrass-fire cycle.
Big Bluestem (Andropogon gerardii) in flower coming to seed. You can see a bit of the blue tinge in part of the stalk. This is an example of what I call zen photography...imaging with the wind without using flash or fast shutter speeds. Scene at Spring Creek Prairie Nebraska ~ perhaps should be called Big Redstem, but there is plenty big red around the state already.
(Img0207_DM200908_3087_1111w_1.jpg) © All rights reserved.
This ivy is crawling quite happily up the mall south wall. I love the red stems. The green leaves directly under the purple berries might be a different ivy. Someone (Jim maybe???) help me with identification??
Lythraceae (Lythrum, or loosestrife family) » Ammannia baccifera
am-MAH-nee-uh -- named for Paul Ammann, German botanist
bak-IF-er-uh -- meaning, bearing berries
commonly known as: ammannia, acrid weed, blistering ammania, monarch redstem, tooth cup • Bengali: বনমরিচ banmarich • Hindi: अगिन बूटी aginbuti, बन मिरिच ban mirich, दादमारी dadmari, जंगली मेंहदी jungli mehendi • Kannada: ಕಾಡುಗಿಡ kaadugida • Konkani: दादमार्या dadmaria • Malayalam: kallur vanchi, nirumelneruppu • Marathi: अगीनबुटी aginbuti, भरजांभूळ bharajambhula, दादमारी dadmari • Nepalese: अम्बार ambar • Punjabi: dadarbooti • Sanskrit: अग्निगार्भ agnigarbha, ब्राह्मसोम brahmasoma, क्षेत्रभूषा kshetrabhusha, क्षेत्रवशिनी kshetravashini, महाश्याम mahasyama, पाषाणभेद pasanabheda • Tamil: கல்லுருவி kal-l-uruvi • Telugu: అగ్నివేండపాకు agnivendapaku
Native to: India
References: Flowers of India • eFlora • Floristic Survey of Institute of Science
Redstem Filaree is a wide-spread, non-native wildflower that most consider a weed. It does have some pretty flowers and is one of the first to bloom in early spring. My idiot neighbor's front yard is infested with weeds, including this species - Phoenix, Arizona
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redstem monkeyflower, Erythranthe rubella, magenta form, White Mountains, elevation 1825 m (5985 ft)
The Red Osier Dogwood was photographed on Prout's Island located on Sesekinika Lake Sesekinika Ontario Canada.
In the wild, it commonly grows in areas of damp soil, such as wetlands. It is a medium to tall deciduous shrub, growing 1.5–4 m tall and 3–5 m wide, spreading readily by underground stolons to form dense thickets. The branches and twigs are dark red, although wild plants may lack this coloration in shaded areas. The leaves are opposite, 5–12 cm long and 2.5–6 cm broad, with an ovate to oblong shape and an entire margin; they are dark green above and glaucous below; fall color is commonly bright red to purple. The flowers are small (5–10 mm diameter), dull white, in clusters 3–6 cm diameter. The fruit is a globose white berry 5–9 mm diameter.
Twig dogwood volunteers in my mulch, and I move them into the greenspace along my property. There are yellow and red-bark versions. I think they are all a Cornus sericea. The tartarian dogwood, C. alba, is very similar. Appears, though, the sericea "fruit is borne in late summer and early autumn in comparison to C. alba which produces fruit in June and July that does not persist."(UConn site) Most of these have fruit that develops in fall.
Lythraceae (Lythrum, or loosestrife family) » Ammannia baccifera
am-MAH-nee-uh -- named for Paul Ammann, German botanist
bak-IF-er-uh -- meaning, bearing berries
commonly known as: ammannia, acrid weed, blistering ammania , monarch redstem, tooth cup • Bengali: বনমরিচ banmarich • Hindi: अगिन बूटी aginbuti, बन मिरिच ban mirich, दादमारी dadmari, जंगली मेंहदी jungli mehendi • Kannada: ಕಾಡುಗಿಡ kaadugida • Konkani: दादमार्या dadmaria • Malayalam: kallur vanchi, nirumelneruppu • Marathi: अगीनबुटी aginbuti, भरजांभूळ bharajambhula, दादमारी dadmari • Nepalese: अम्बार ambar • Punjabi: dadarbooti • Sanskrit: अग्निगार्भ agnigarbha, ब्राह्मसोम brahmasoma, क्षेत्रभूषा kshetrabhusha, क्षेत्रवशिनी kshetravashini, महाश्याम mahasyama, पाषाणभेद pasanabheda • Tamil: கல்லுருவி kal-l-uruvi • Telugu: అగ్నివేండపాకు agnivendapaku
Native to: India
References: eFlora • Floristic Survey of Institute of Science
Ammannia coccinea (Valley redstem)
Flowers and fruit forming at Hanalei NWR, Kauai, Hawaii.
March 22, 2013
Redstem Storksbill (a.k.a.Redstem Filaree, Common Stork's-bill, Pinweed; Erodium cicutarium) and a Pale Alyssum (a.k.a. Pale Madwort, Yellow Alyssum; Alyssum alyssoides) plant to the right - Ugb-Biscuit Basin Trail, Upper Geyser Basin, Yellowstone National Park, Three River Junction¹, Park County, Wyoming (44.467082, -110.841985)
¹ Three River Junction is where the 3 forks (Philips, Greg & Ferris) of the Bechler River come together.
Little Redstem Monkeyflower (Erythranthe rubella) - The Upper Geyser Basin, Yellowstone National Park, Three River Junction¹, Park County, Wyoming (44.467082, -110.841985)
¹ Three River Junction is where the 3 forks (Philips, Greg & Ferris) of the Bechler River come together.
This flower is the redstem filaree (Erodium cicutarium), a widespread weed that grows on the poor soils. It was grown on the sand near the weir.
Post-fire sagebrush steppe vegetation in the region of northeastern Nevada includes much more than Bromus tectorum. Erodium cicutarium and Sisymbrium altissimum are often more abundant, and native species of Argemone, Asclepias, Elymus, Lygodesmia, Poa, and Tetradymia, for example, are common. Such sites are perhaps degraded such that cheatgrass can't compete but then this argues against a cheatgrass-fire cycle.
Lythraceae (Lythrum, or loosestrife family) » Ammannia baccifera
am-MAH-nee-uh -- named for Paul Ammann, German botanist
bak-IF-er-uh -- meaning, bearing berries
commonly known as: ammannia, acrid weed, blistering ammania, monarch redstem, tooth cup • Bengali: বনমরিচ banmarich • Hindi: अगिन बूटी aginbuti, बन मिरिच ban mirich, दादमारी dadmari, जंगली मेंहदी jungli mehendi • Kannada: ಕಾಡುಗಿಡ kaadugida • Konkani: दादमार्या dadmaria • Malayalam: kallur vanchi, nirumelneruppu • Marathi: अगीनबुटी aginbuti, भरजांभूळ bharajambhula, दादमारी dadmari • Nepalese: अम्बार ambar • Punjabi: dadarbooti • Sanskrit: अग्निगार्भ agnigarbha, ब्राह्मसोम brahmasoma, क्षेत्रभूषा kshetrabhusha, क्षेत्रवशिनी kshetravashini, महाश्याम mahasyama, पाषाणभेद pasanabheda • Tamil: கல்லுருவி kal-l-uruvi • Telugu: అగ్నివేండపాకు agnivendapaku
Native to: India
References: Flowers of India • eFlora • Floristic Survey of Institute of Science
Ollie took a hike and got lost. Before he knew it, he was surrounded by a gang of Stork's Bill. Ollie was really nervous. Ollie's Mom had told him horror stories about the 5-parted schizocarp Stork's Bill fruit and how it curls like a corkscrew when it drys and embeds itself in your socks! Ollie thought anything with schizo and carp in the same word had to be nasty!
Wind Wolves Preserve, Kern County, California 2009
These dogwood volunteer in my garden mulch, and I move them into the greenspace along my fence, as they appear to be native twig dogwood. Some have red bark, some yellow. Most get HUGE very quickly, like 9ft. tall and stems the size of a thumb. Leaves often larger than my out-stretched hand.
A colonizer of highly disturbed often open areas with little plant cover, filaree or stork's bill is considered as yet another invasive weed.
Lythraceae (Lythrum, or loosestrife family) » Ammannia baccifera
am-MAH-nee-uh -- named for Paul Ammann, German botanist
bak-IF-er-uh -- meaning, bearing berries
commonly known as: ammannia, acrid weed, blistering ammania , monarch redstem, tooth cup • Bengali: বনমরিচ banmarich • Hindi: अगिन बूटी aginbuti, बन मिरिच ban mirich, दादमारी dadmari, जंगली मेंहदी jungli mehendi • Kannada: ಕಾಡುಗಿಡ kaadugida • Konkani: दादमार्या dadmaria • Malayalam: kallur vanchi, nirumelneruppu • Marathi: अगीनबुटी aginbuti, भरजांभूळ bharajambhula, दादमारी dadmari • Nepalese: अम्बार ambar • Punjabi: dadarbooti • Sanskrit: अग्निगार्भ agnigarbha, ब्राह्मसोम brahmasoma, क्षेत्रभूषा kshetrabhusha, क्षेत्रवशिनी kshetravashini, महाश्याम mahasyama, पाषाणभेद pasanabheda • Tamil: கல்லுருவி kal-l-uruvi • Telugu: అగ్నివేండపాకు agnivendapaku
Native to: India
References: eFlora • Floristic Survey of Institute of Science
Post-fire sagebrush steppe vegetation in the region of northeastern Nevada includes much more than Bromus tectorum. Erodium cicutarium and Sisymbrium altissimum are often more abundant, and native species of Argemone, Asclepias, Elymus, Lygodesmia, Poa, and Tetradymia, for example, are common. Such sites are perhaps degraded such that cheatgrass can't compete but then this argues against a cheatgrass-fire cycle.
something calls to me, the trees are drawing me near..I've got to find out why. those gentle voices I hear explain it all with a sigh.
.
This is a photo of the front of my herb garden taken yesterday. Eastern exposure means direct light, full sun, here for most of the day, partially shaded at times by some trees and the house across the street. In the gravel, planted in crusher run (CR6), from left to right: variegated euonymus, an evergreen climber/groundcover, liriope which is evergreen here and tasty to rabbits, silvery grey lamb's ears, golden oregano, and a very small Baggesen's Gold boxleaf honeysuckle, a nonflowering mostly evergreen, or in this case, everyellow shrub.
At the front behind the dry stacked stone retaining wall is a row of Munstead lavender, then a row of yellow flowering common garden rue, and visible at center behind that is the top part of a topiary I've grown and have potted in a vintage soup kettle, red osier or redstem dogwood, an extremely hardy deciduous shrub which produces red new growth visible in winter, and will be covered in clusters of less than showy blooms within the next couple weeks. The lavender is days away from being a showstopper.
Post-fire sagebrush steppe vegetation in the region of northeastern Nevada includes much more than Bromus tectorum. Erodium cicutarium and Sisymbrium altissimum are often more abundant, and native species of Argemone, Asclepias, Elymus, Lygodesmia, Poa, and Tetradymia, for example, are common. Such sites are perhaps degraded such that cheatgrass can't compete but then this argues against a cheatgrass-fire cycle.
Peony 'Chippewa' 23W22 Lactiflora G3- (Murawska, 1943) (3-DB-R) Lactiflora Cultivar Peony, Mature plant size: 36in., RED, tall, dark red double, red stems, sidebuds, visible stamens, midseason bloomer, USDA Hardiness Zone 3-8, Michigan Bloom Week ISO WW22, In Garden Bed G3 for 16.7 YEARS (Wild). Planted in 2006.
Peony 'Chippewa' (Murawska, 1943) is a double, lactiflora cultivar: tall at ~40”, dark black red, velvety texture, some stamens visible, midseason bloomer, long red stems, side-buds, strong grower, good cut flower, needs support. Not offered in recent nursery catalogs. Bred by A.L. Murawska (1893-1968) River Grove, Illinois who has 42 peonies listed with APS. His focus was on lactiflora cultivars that not only did well at shows, but performed well in the garden: 'Moonstone' and 'Princess Margaret' are highly rated.
Does not do well in the rain. The long stems bend and flowers hit the ground.
Photo by F.D.Richards, SE Michigan. Link to additional photos of this plant from 2014, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23:
www.flickr.com/search/?user_id=50697352%40N00&sort=da...
#Michigan, #49236, #usdaZone6, #week4, #Perennial, #Peony, #Double, #RedStems, #Chippewa, #Lactiflora, #23W22
El Erodium cicutarium subesp. cicutarium es uno de los muchos geranios silvestres, que florecen en primavera por casi todas las zonas templadas del mundo, igual en suelos arenosos junto al mar como en prados húmedos de montaña y cultivos.
Esas manchitas en los pétalos es la caracteristica de la subespecie cicutarum, frente a la bipinnatum que no las tiene.
Su nombre común es Alfileres o Alfilerillos, igualmente que en inglés Redstem filaree.
Gracias a todos los que habeis visitado mi álbum Flora Galega, con 2.600 visitas es señal de que mereció la pena el esfuerzo de identificación y documentación de las especies.
Ya no es el mero hecho de fotografiar flores, cada vez más gente se va animando a adentrarse en la botánica, a disfrutar con la biodiversidad, un mundo de lo más apasionante........