Listing 1 - 10 from 29 for spurges
Brooklyn Botanic Garden: Enterprising Euphorbia—Spring-Flowering
Spurges for All Your Garden Needs
... AND CATERED EVENTS Home » Gardening Information » Great Plants Enterprising Euphorbia—Spring-Flowering Spurges for All Your Garden Needs Plants & Gardens News Volume 19, Number 1 | Spring 2004 ... worldwide but found mainly in Europe, Africa, and Asia. Euphorbia species (often just called spurges) are adapted to many different climates and habitats. South African species, for example, are ...
www.bbg.org
FLORA OF NORTH AMERICA - Volume 1, Chapter 15
... subfamily of the Fabaceae, the bean family. Similarly, the nomenclature within the genus Euphorbia (the spurges) is not affected whether its family, the Euphorbiaceae, is treated among the Rosidae, as in ...
hua.huh.harvard.edu
Bamboo
... bicolor). C-4 grasses and weedy herbs, such as purslane (Portulaca oleracea) and prostrate ground spurges (Chamaecyse), grow rapidly during hot summer days when photosynthesis and growth in C-3 plants ...
waynesword.palomar.edu
Goosefoot Family
... bicolor). C-4 grasses and weedy herbs, such as purslane (Portulaca oleracea) and prostrate ground spurges (Chamaesyce), grow rapidly during hot summer days when photosynthesis and growth in C-3 plants ...
waynesword.palomar.edu
Flowering Plants
... (Euphorbiaceae). The variation within this genus is astonishing, from low-growing garden weeds called spurges to giant, cactus-like succulents that rival in size our North American sahuaro and ... . It should be noted here that some authorities place the prostrate, herbaceous euphorbias (called spurges) with C-4 photosynthesis in the genus Chamaesyce. Poinsettia (Euphorbia pulcherrima) in full bloom ...
waynesword.palomar.edu
Photosynthesis 1
... bundle sheaths where CO2 levels are concentrated. Weedy C-4 plants such as Bermuda grass, spurges and purslane grow rapidly during hot summer days, while photosynthesis and growth in C-3 ...
waynesword.palomar.edu
Inflorescence Terminology (Part 2)
... species. The variation within this genus is astonishing, from low-growing garden weeds called spurges to giant, cactus-like succulents that rival in size our North American sahuaro and ... . It should be noted here that some authorities place the prostrate, herbaceous euphorbias (called spurges) with C-4 photosynthesis in the genus Chamaesyce. Poinsettia (Euphorbia pulcherrima) in full bloom ...
waynesword.palomar.edu
Rosidae UW Aberystwyth Botanic Gardens
... such as pinnately compound leaves. Familiar members of the subclass include legumes (peas, beans, etc), spurges, Eucalyptus, evening primroses, roses, maples, grapes, geraniums, carrots, strawberries, apples, cherries, and raspberries. Euphorbiaceae: Spurge ...
www.aber.ac.uk
Brooklyn Botanic Garden: Great Plants
... Gardener Cutleaf Staghorn Sumac, Rhus typhina 'Laciniata'—A Sophisticated Cultivar Enterprising Euphorbia—Spring-Flowering Spurges for All Your Garden Needs Ferns—Wild Plants Make a Comeback Fothergillas—Super Shrubs for ...
www.bbg.org
Alkaloids
... NASTURTIUM NUX VOMICA OLEANDER OPIUM POPPY PERUVIAN TRUMPET PEYOTE POINSETTIA POTATOE SIDA CORDIFOLIA SPANISH BROOM SPURGES SQUIRTING CUCUMBER STINKING HELLEBORE THORN-APPLE TOBACCO WHITE BRYONY TANSY TRAVELLER'S JOY WALNUT WOOD ...
www.botanical-online.com