Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Under a microscope "The yellow cloud" by Hanno Karlhuber. Brassica napus grows to 100 centimetres (39 inches) in height with hairless, fleshy, pinnatifid and glaucous lower leaves [5] [6] [7] which are stalked whereas the upper leaves have no petioles. [8] Rapeseed flowers are bright yellow and about 17 millimetres (3 ⁄ 4 in) across. [6]
Linum flavum, the golden flax or yellow flax, is a species of flowering plant in the family Linaceae, native to central and southern Europe. It is an erect, woody perennial growing to 30 cm (12 in) tall by 20 cm (8 in) broad, with dark green, semi- evergreen leaves, and terminal clusters of bright yellow, five-petalled flowers in spring. [ 2 ]
This category contains the native flora of Florida as defined by the World Geographical Scheme for Recording Plant Distributions. Taxa of the lowest rank are always included; taxa of higher ranks (e.g. genus) are only included if monotypic or endemic. Include taxa here that are endemic or have restricted distributions (e.g. only a few countries).
Atop the stem is a showy inflorescence of many bright yellow flowers. [3] Each flower has four narrow sepals and four oblong petals around a cluster of six long stamens [3] tipped with knobby anthers. As the inflorescence lengthens at the top of the stem, flowers that have opened and been pollinated drop their petals and the ovary develops into ...
Silphium perfoliatum, the cup plant [2] or cup-plant, is a species of flowering plant in the family Asteraceae, native to eastern and central North America. It is an erect herbaceous perennial with triangular toothed leaves, and daisy-like yellow composite flower heads in summer.
Linum medium, common name stiff yellow flax, [1] is a species of Linum (flax) native to eastern North America. It is found as far west as Texas and Wisconsin , east to the Atlantic Ocean , north to Ontario and Maine , and south to southern Florida . [ 2 ]
Dendrobium agrostophyllum, the buttercup orchid, [2] is an epiphytic or lithophytic orchid in the family Orchidaceae and has a creeping rhizome with well-spaced pseudobulbs.Each pseudobulb has up to twenty grass-like leaves, some of the leaves having flowering stems on the opposite side of the pseudobulb, each raceme with up to ten waxy, fragrant, bright yellow flowers.
Syngonanthus flavidulus, common name yellow hatpins, is a flowering plant. [1] It grows in the southeastern United States including Alabama, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina. [ 2 ] It is in the Syngonanthus genus and pipewort family Eriocaulaceae . [ 3 ]