caltha การใช้
- "Caltha palustris " is a highly variable species.
- "Caltha sagittata " has a rather large distribution.
- "Caltha palustris " is infertile when self-pollinated.
- "Caltha leptosepala " also is highly variable.
- In North America " Caltha palustris " is sometimes known as cowslip.
- In the wetter areas rushes and marsh marigold ( " Caltha palustris " ) are found.
- This refers to the burning reaction that some people experience from contact with " Caltha " sap.
- The conclusion of the game takes place in and around the large central arena of Caltha in the Imperial Region.
- For this reason the subspecies status is generally preferred over distinguishing a separate species ( " Caltha biflora " ).
- In the UK, " Caltha palustris " is known by a variety of vernacular names, varying by geographical region.
- In Latvia Caltha palustris is also known as " Gundega " which is also used as a girls name which symbolizes fire.
- St . Gatien was involved in a close race for the minor places and finished fifth, just behind Bendigo, Eastern Emperor and Caltha.
- Surrounding meadowlands and ditches support other species, including, for example, ragged robin " Lychnis flos-cuculi ", marsh marigold " Caltha palustris ".
- Specific species include Belamcanda chinensis, Caltha palustris var . nipponica, Carex podogyna, Lysichiton camtschatcense, Menyanthes trifoliata, Myrica gale var . tomentosa, Potamogeton distinctus, and Primula japonica.
- It is by far the most robust of the Southern Hemisphere " Caltha " species ( section " Psychrophila " ), and also the one with a distribution which extends furthest North.
- Another visitor of " Caltha palustris " in western Europe is the leaf beetle " Prasocuris phellandrii ", which is black with four orange stripes and around ?cm and eats the sepals.
- Alpine bistort, " Polygonum viviparum ", which is rare in the Pennines, is found on the steep banks, and marsh-marigold, " Caltha palustris ", is abundant in the wetter patches.
- (i ) Seminar on speciation in plants, held under the auspices of the Botanical Society of the British Isles, London, in April 1954, and his paper entitled'Caltha in the British Flora'was published in Species studies in British Flora ( ed.
- ""'Caltha introloba " "', commonly known as the "'alpine marsh-marigold "'is a small ( during flowering 1 2 cm high ) hairless, perennial alpine herb, that is endemic to the alpine regions of Australia and Tasmania.
- ""'Caltha dioneaefolia " "'is a dwarf perennial herb, with apparently seated pale yellow flowers with about seven stamens and two to three free carpels and leaves that are reminiscent of those of the Venus flytrap, but very small and with leaflike appendages on the leaf . " C . dioneaefolia " occurs in the southern Andes of Chili and Argentina, including on Tierra del Fuego.
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