When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Fagraea berteroana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fagraea_berteroana

    Fagraea berteroana (orth. variant F. berteriana), commonly known as the pua keni keni, pua kenikeni or perfume flower tree, is a small spreading tree or a large shrub. It is known as the pua-lulu in the Samoan Islands, and as pua in Tonga and Tahiti .

  3. Metrosideros polymorpha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metrosideros_polymorpha

    Flowers are usually bright to medium red but orange-red, salmon, pink, yellow, or orange forms are also found. The flowers appear in clusters on the terminal ends of the branches. Masses of stamens extend from the flower and give the blossoms their characteristic pom-pom shape.

  4. Murraya paniculata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murraya_paniculata

    The flowers are fragrant and are arranged in loose groups, each flower on a pedicel 1–1.5 mm (0.039–0.059 in) long. There are five (sometimes four) sepals about 1 mm (0.039 in) long and five (sometimes four) white or cream-coloured petals 13–18 mm (0.51–0.71 in) long. and the fruit is an oval, glabrous, orange-red berry 12–14 mm (0.47 ...

  5. Butterflies Absolutely Love These Orange Flowers

    www.aol.com/butterflies-absolutely-love-orange...

    This perennial has the cutest button-like orange flowers dancing on long stems. Geum bloom in the spring but have lovely, dense foliage the rest of the season. Liudmyla Liudmyla - Getty Images

  6. Lilium bulbiferum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lilium_bulbiferum

    Lilium bulbiferum, common names orange lily, [2] fire lily, Jimmy's Bane, tiger lily and St. John's Lily, is a herbaceous European lily with underground bulbs, belonging to the Liliaceae. [ 1 ] [ 3 ] The Latin name bulbiferum of this species, meaning "bearing bulbs", refers to the secondary bulbs on the stem of the nominal subspecies.

  7. Buddleja globosa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buddleja_globosa

    Buddleja globosa, also known as the orange-ball-tree, [1] orange ball buddleja, and matico, is a species of flowering plant endemic to Chile and Argentina, where it grows in dry and moist forest, from sea level to 2,000 m. [2] The species was first described and named by Hope in 1782. [3]

  8. Hibbertia miniata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hibbertia_miniata

    Hibbertia miniata is either an erect small shrub or grows horizontally along the ground and 0.1–1 m (3.9 in – 3 ft 3.4 in) high and rounded in outline. The leaves are lance-shaped, broader and rounded at the apex, sessile, 3–3.5 cm (1.2–1.4 in) long, 4–7 mm (0.16–0.28 in) wide, densely covered with grey short, soft, matted hairs or soft, silky hairs.

  9. Thespesia grandiflora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thespesia_grandiflora

    Thespesia grandiflora, most commonly known as Maga, and also referred to as Maga Colorada ("Red Maga") and Puerto Rican hibiscus, [2] is a tree in the family Malvaceae of the rosids clade [2] endemic to Puerto Rico, where its flower is officially recognized as the national flower of the archipelago.