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Trifolium campestre, commonly known as hop trefoil, [1] field clover [2] and low hop clover, is a species of flowering plant native to Europe and western Asia, growing in dry, sandy grassland habitats, fields, woodland margins, roadsides, wastelands and cultivated land. The species name campestre means "of the fields".
Rapeseed flowers are bright yellow and about 17 millimetres (3 ⁄ 4 in) across. [6] They are radial and consist of four petals in a typical cross-form, alternating with four sepals. They have indeterminate racemose flowering starting at the lowest bud and growing upward in the
Flowers appear April to May at the end of each stem in a group, or umbel, of 2 to 6, occasionally only 1. The flowers are 5–13 mm (0.2–0.5 in) long, with 3 yellow petals and 3 yellow sepals spreading outwards. The flowers will open in the morning but typically wilt in the hot afternoon sun.
The inflorescence is a raceme made up of yellow flowers having four petals with spreading sepals. [3] [4] The fruit is a silique 3–5 cm long with a beak 1–2 cm long that is flattened-quadrangular. The valves of the silique are glabrous or rarely bristly, three to five nerved. The seeds are dark red or brown, [2] smooth 1-1.5 mm in diameter.
Geum aleppicum, commonly called yellow avens or common avens [1] is a flowering plant native to most of the temperate Northern Hemisphere, from eastern Europe across Asia and North America. It is a herbaceous perennial plant growing to 1 m tall with pinnate leaves. The flowers are 2 cm diameter, yellow, with five to seven toothed petals. [1]
This is a hairy annual or biennial herb producing stems which grow upright or lie along the ground to a maximum length of 30 to 40 centimeters. [5] It produces yellow flowers May–July that fade to white with four small petals about 1.5–3 mm long. [6] [7] The fruit is a round, hairy capsule up to half a centimeter long.