Summary[edit] Description: Français : Tige de Datura inoxia cultivée en serre. Les trichomes sont bien visibles. English: Greenhouse-grown Datura inoxia stem. Trichomes are obvious. Español: Tallo de une Datura inoxia cultivada en invernadero. Los tricomas son evidentes. Deutsch: Gewächshauskultiviert Datura inoxia Sprossachse. Die Trichome sind evidente. Date: 5 February 2012. Source: Own work. Author: Silk666.
Summary[edit] Description: Native, warm season, perennial herb. Stems are 15–30 cm tall, simple or few-branched, tufted and arising from a woody rootstock. Leaves are mostly cauline, ± linear and usually 1.5–3.5 cm long by 0.5–1.5 mm wide. Scapes are simple and 1-headed; heads are broad-hemispherical and 8–15 mm diam. Involucral bracts are 5–8-seriate and dull greenish, the margins sometimes minutely toothed or ± lacerated but not ciliate. Florets are numerous, all bisexual and yellow. Grows in grassland and woodland; in the A.C.T. and Monaro region, rare. Date: 7 November 2014, 11:57. Source: Rutidosis leptorrhynchoides head2 ST. Author: Harry Rose from Dungog, Australia. Camera location35° 16′ 44.35″ S, 149° 06′ 32.17″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap - Google Earth-35.278987; 149.108936.
Summary[edit] Description: Native, cool season, usually annual, sometimes perennial, erect, viscid herb 20–80 cm tall. Stems are usually much-branched and strongly scabrous with stiff hairs or minute prickles. Leaves are narrow-oblanceolate to lanceolate or linear, mostly 1–8 cm long and 1–5 mm wide ( rarely to 10 mm). Heads are terminal on all branchlets, singly or up to 3 together and 2–3 cm diam. Involucral bracts are scarious; outermost bracts brownish yellow, intermediate bracts the longest and bright yellow. Florets are yellow and tubular. Achenes are oblong, 4-angled and about 2 mm long, with a pappus of golden barbellate bristles. Flowering is mostly in spring. Grows in open woodland and sclerophyll forest, usually on sandy to sandy loam soils. Date: 7 October 2014, 14:12. Source: Xerochrysum viscosum plant8 SWS. Author: Harry Rose from Dungog, Australia. Camera location 36° 04′ 45.38″ S, 146° 54′ 14.52″ E: View all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap - Google Earth: -36.079271; 146.904032.
Summary[edit] Description: Giant sumpweed (Iva xanthifolia syn. Cyclachaena xanthiifolia), Aster family (Asteraceae). Shoreline of the East Canyon Reservoir, Utah. Date: 19 August 2015, 10:42. Source: 2015.08.19_10.42.06_IMG_0191. Author: Andrey Zharkikh from Salt Lake City, USA.
Summary[edit] Description: Native, warm season, perennial herb. Stems are 15–30 cm tall, simple or few-branched, tufted and arising from a woody rootstock. Leaves are mostly cauline, ± linear and usually 1.5–3.5 cm long by 0.5–1.5 mm wide. Scapes are simple and 1-headed; heads are broad-hemispherical and 8–15 mm diam. Involucral bracts are 5–8-seriate and dull greenish, the margins sometimes minutely toothed or ± lacerated but not ciliate. Florets are numerous, all bisexual and yellow. Grows in grassland and woodland; in the A.C.T. and Monaro region, rare. Date: 7 November 2014, 11:57. Source: Rutidosis leptorrhynchoides head3 ST. Author: Harry Rose from Dungog, Australia. Camera location35° 16′ 44.35″ S, 149° 06′ 32.17″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap - Google Earth-35.278987; 149.108936.
Summary[edit] Description: Native, cool season, usually annual, sometimes perennial, erect, viscid herb 20–80 cm tall. Stems are usually much-branched and strongly scabrous with stiff hairs or minute prickles. Leaves are narrow-oblanceolate to lanceolate or linear, mostly 1–8 cm long and 1–5 mm wide ( rarely to 10 mm). Heads are terminal on all branchlets, singly or up to 3 together and 2–3 cm diam. Involucral bracts are scarious; outermost bracts brownish yellow, intermediate bracts the longest and bright yellow. Florets are yellow and tubular. Achenes are oblong, 4-angled and about 2 mm long, with a pappus of golden barbellate bristles. Flowering is mostly in spring. Grows in open woodland and sclerophyll forest, usually on sandy to sandy loam soils. Date: 8 November 2014, 11:40. Source: Xerochrysum viscosum leaf2 QNR. Author: Harry Rose from Dungog, Australia. Camera location 36° 04′ 45.38″ S, 146° 54′ 14.52″ E: View all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap - Google Earth: -36.079271; 146.904032.
Description: English: I am the originator of this photo. I hold the copyright. I release it to the public domain. This photo depicts a flower of an annual Nicotiana. Date: 10 May 2009 (original upload date). Source: Transferred from en.wikipedia to Commons by Quadell using CommonsHelper. Author: Neelix at English Wikipedia.
Summary[edit] Description: Native, warm season, perennial herb. Stems are 15–30 cm tall, simple or few-branched, tufted and arising from a woody rootstock. Leaves are mostly cauline, ± linear and usually 1.5–3.5 cm long by 0.5–1.5 mm wide. Scapes are simple and 1-headed; heads are broad-hemispherical and 8–15 mm diam. Involucral bracts are 5–8-seriate and dull greenish, the margins sometimes minutely toothed or ± lacerated but not ciliate. Florets are numerous, all bisexual and yellow. Grows in grassland and woodland; in the A.C.T. and Monaro region, rare. Date: 8 November 2014, 12:39. Source: Rutidosis leptorrhynchoides head18 QNR. Author: Harry Rose from Dungog, Australia. Camera location35° 22′ 03.41″ S, 149° 11′ 56.37″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap - Google Earth-35.367613; 149.198993.
Summary[edit] Description: Sticky Everlasting, Xerochrysum viscosum. Apsley Falls, Oxley Wild Rivers National Park, NSW Australia, April 2013. Date: 13 April 2013, 16:09. Source: Sticky Everlasting. Author: John Tann from Sydney, Australia. Camera location31° 03′ 09.36″ S, 151° 45′ 42.67″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap-31.052600; 151.761853.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Galactites tomentosa in Los Tilos de Moya, Gran Canaria. Date: 2 April 2014, 11:59:52. Source: Own work. Author: Krzysztof Ziarnek, Kenraiz.
Summary[edit] Description: Native, warm season, perennial herb. Stems are 15–30 cm tall, simple or few-branched, tufted and arising from a woody rootstock. Leaves are mostly cauline, ± linear and usually 1.5–3.5 cm long by 0.5–1.5 mm wide. Scapes are simple and 1-headed; heads are broad-hemispherical and 8–15 mm diam. Involucral bracts are 5–8-seriate and dull greenish, the margins sometimes minutely toothed or ± lacerated but not ciliate. Florets are numerous, all bisexual and yellow. Grows in grassland and woodland; in the A.C.T. and Monaro region, rare. Date: 8 November 2014, 12:40. Source: Rutidosis leptorrhynchoides plant8 QNR. Author: Harry Rose from Dungog, Australia. Camera location35° 22′ 03.41″ S, 149° 11′ 56.37″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap - Google Earth-35.367613; 149.198993.