-
Madre de Dios, Peru
-
Queensland, Australia
-
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
-
Merimbula, New South Wales, Australia
-
Charters Towers, Queensland, Australia
-
Millettia peguensis from Papilionaceae.
-
Denmark, Western Australia, Australia
-
Black Locust flowers, Putney, Vermont
-
Lathyrus pauciflorus var. utahensis. Note the long, lower calyx tooth. The white-flowering shrub in the background is Mallow Ninebark, Physocarpus malvaceus.June 2, 2012, Salt Lake County, Utah, elev. approx. 5600 ft, mountain brush community.
-
Glen Ayr, New South Wales, Australia
-
Charcos, Puntarenas, Costa Rica
-
-
Rose Canyon Lake, Santa Catalina Mountains, Arizona, September 2010
-
-
Port Augusta, South Australia, Australia
-
Queensland, Australia
-
Christmas, Florida, United States
-
-
-
FloraBase describes this plant as "Many-stemmed, leafless shrub, 0.25-0.6 m high. Fl. yellow/orange & red/black, May to Sep."Photo: Fred
-
Quinninup, Western Australia, Australia
-
Charcos, Puntarenas, Costa Rica
-
Colville's Glory (Colvillea racemosa) cultivated in Anderson Park, Townsville, Queensland, Australia. Photographed on 5 April 1973.Native to Madagascar.Digitised from a slide. The original slide, which is of higher quality, is held.
-
Astragalus onobrychis L.DE: Esparsetten Tragant, Esparsetten StragelSlo.: dolgojadrni grahovecDat.: June 27. 2010Lat.: 46.33443 Long.: 13.63594Code: Bot_432/2010_IMG1159Habitat: Larger openings in riparian wood, Picea abies and Salix eleagnos dominant; alluvial, shallow, stony and sandy, calcareous ground; flat terrains; full sun, locally dry place; exposed to direct rain; elevation 425-430 m (1.390-1.410 feet); average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 8-10 deg C, alpine phytogeographical region. Substratum: soil among stones and sand.Place: Lower Trenta valley, left bank of river Soa, near confluence with Lepenica stream, east of 'Za otoki' place, East Julian Alps, Posoje, Slovenia EC.Comment: Astragalus onobrychis is west Asian - east European plant growing in many parts of the Alps, Apennines, Carpathians, Dinaric and south Balkan Peninsula mountains. The warmth loving plant hadn't been known in the alpine and prealpine phytogeographical region of Slovenia until recently. In 2008 it was discovered on an isolated, locally sunny and warm place in Trenta valley at the mouth of Lepena side valley. It is now showing its beautiful violet flowers year after year on more or less the same place. For now this is its only known location in Julian Alps and among the most northern in Slovenia.Ref.:(1) Personal communication with Dr. Igor Dakskobler, Natural History Institute Jovan Hadi, SAZU.(2) M.A. Fischer, W. Adler, K. Oswald, Exkursionsflora fr sterreich, Liechtenstein und Sdtirol, LO Landesmuseen, Linz, Austria (2005), p 576.(3) A. Martini et all., Mala Flora Slovenije (Flora of Slovenia - Key) (in Slovenian), Tehnina Zaloba Slovenije (2007), p 313. (4) D. Aeschimann, K. Lauber, D.M. Moser, J.P. Theurillat, Flora Alpina, Vol. 1., Haupt (2004), p 848.