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Albuca bracteata (syn. Ornithogalum longebracteatum [2]), is known by the common names pregnant onion, [3] false sea onion, [4] and sea-onion. [5] It is a species of bulbous flowering plant in the family Asparagaceae. Its flowering stems can reach a height of 90 cm and can carry up to 100 greenish white flowers.
The onion plant (Allium cepa), also known as the bulb onion [2] or common onion, [3] is the most widely cultivated species of the genus Allium. [4] [5] It was first officially described by Carl Linnaeus in his 1753 work Species Plantarum. [6] Synonyms during its taxonomic history are: [7] [8] Allium cepa var. aggregatum – G. Don
Allium validum is a species of flowering plant commonly called swamp onion, wild onion, Pacific onion, or Pacific mountain onion. It is native to the Cascade Range , the Sierra Nevada , the Rocky Mountains , and other high-elevation regions in California , Oregon , Washington , Nevada , Idaho and British Columbia .
O. umbellatum is a perennial herbaceous bulbous plant , dying back after flowering, to an underground storage bulb. The following year, it regrows from the often shallow rooted bulbs, which are ovoid with a membranous coat, [ 2 ] 15–25 millimetres ( 1 ⁄ 2 –1 inch) long and 18–32 mm ( 3 ⁄ 4 – 1 + 1 ⁄ 4 in) in diameter.
Bombus vancouverensis feeding on Allium cernuum. The species has been reported from much of the United States, Canada and Mexico including in the Appalachian Mountains from Alabama to New York State, the Great Lakes Region, the Ohio and Tennessee River Valleys, the Ozarks of Arkansas and Missouri, and the Rocky and Cascade Mountains of the West, from Mexico to Washington.
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The bulbs are solitary or clustered and tunicate and the plants are perennialized by the bulbs reforming annually from the base of the old bulbs, or are produced on the ends of rhizomes or, in a few species, at the ends of stolons. [21] A small number of species have tuberous roots. The bulbs' outer coats are commonly brown or grey, with a ...
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