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Grow Your Own Peppers - OSU Extension Catalog
Grow Your Own Peppers - OSU Extension Catalog

... temperatures are below these ranges or if soil is too dry. Some varieties that experience temperatures below 60°F will not even blossom. Select the variety most suited to your area’s temperature. Peppers mature slowly. Under good growing conditions, they take at least 45 to 55 days after pollination ...
Communities and Biomes
Communities and Biomes

... affect an organism’s population, reproduction, distribution, or ability to survive in its environment • Factors that limit one population in a community may also have an indirect effect on another population. • Abiotic (non-living) factors – Sunlight, temperature, climate, water, food, soil, space, ...
Tulips - Trecanna Nursery
Tulips - Trecanna Nursery

... drainage is a problem of keep to growing in raised beds or containers. If your soil is very acid then an addition of some lime might produce better long term results however, this is not essential. Plant the bulbs around three times as deep as the height of the bulb – this usually means 4-6” deep fo ...
Chapter 30
Chapter 30

... 2. Angiosperms are flowering plants that form seeds inside a protective chamber called an ovary. A. Systematists are identifying angiosperm clades 1. Monocots are angiosperms that possess one embryonic seed leaf (cotyledon). ...
bog laurel - Strathcona Park Lodge
bog laurel - Strathcona Park Lodge

... large, erect leaves. Look for the shape of a swords hilt at the base of the leaf near the stem to identify this plant. It’s Cool Sword fern leaves were used by northwest coast people as a protective layer in traditional pit ovens, in storage boxes, baskets, and on berry-drying racks. The leaves were ...
Quercus velutina
Quercus velutina

... slender or stout. Its pith is star-shaped in cross-section. These twigs are bitter tasting. They can make saliva turn yellow. Its leaf scars are alternate or are clustered near the tip. Each scar is half rounded and is slightly elevated. It has 3 or more bundle scars. Buds: Its terminal buds are dar ...
Tropical Plant Identifications
Tropical Plant Identifications

... their water and show a spotting like freckles on their foliage. When damage on the fronds becomes predominant, cut these fronds off as well. ...
Romanesco
Romanesco

... green-colored cauliflower. This Italian heirloom that was once grown exclusively around Rome produces striking light green heads composed of numerous cone-shaped florets, each one growing in a logarithmic spiral. The pointed groups of buds are a cluster of branched meristems arising from a central s ...
grasses - apswarrnambool.org.au
grasses - apswarrnambool.org.au

... Size: To 1m high. Flowering: October - November. Habitat: One of the most common, widespread and conspicuous grasses in Australia, found mainly in grasslands, woodlands and open forests. Description: Kangaroo grass is a drought-resistant, deep-rooted, erect tussock forming perennial grass with stalk ...
A new species of Sipapoantha
A new species of Sipapoantha

... Rogersonanthus and Symbolanthus G.Don), placement of the new species within Rogersonanthus based on that character seems inappropriate. Therefore, the most logical placement for the new species is in Sipapoantha, based on the colour and texture of its dried leaves and blue corollas. In the circumscr ...
B A C D
B A C D

... BRACTS: None or inconspicuous to short-prolonged, narrow, darkauricled, and somewhat removed from the inflorescence. SPIKES: Usually solitary, erect, plants dioecious, pistillate and staminate spikes similar in size, shape, and color. Terminal: Cylindric, 1.54 cm long, 3-6 mm thick, densely flowered ...
CROSSOLIPARIS – A NEW GENUS OF MALAXIDINAE
CROSSOLIPARIS – A NEW GENUS OF MALAXIDINAE

... As working on the taxonomic revision of the subtribe Malaxidinae (Orchidaceae), I had the occasion to study dried and liquid preserved herbarium specimens, living materials and pertinent bibliography at deposited in various collections. Among neotropic representatives of the subtribe one species was ...
Scout Program - Joey Central
Scout Program - Joey Central

... should come to the palace to receive one royal seed. Whichever boy could show the best results within six months would win the contest and become the next to wear the crown. You can imagine the excitement! Every boy in China fancied himself likely to win. Parents of boys who were talented at growing ...
Phantom orchid - Draft - UBC Geography
Phantom orchid - Draft - UBC Geography

... individuals. Flowering stems are merely indicators of presence and potential viability, not actual population numbers. Although suitable habitat appears to exist in parts of the Fraser Valley, this species is rare and localized. Description: The phantom orchid is a white, non-photosynthetic, rhizoma ...
Columbine flowers
Columbine flowers

... In the religion and mythology of every ancient nation, the garden, fragrant with the varied sights and smells of beautiful flowers, is portrayed as the natural habitat of gods. Often sacred meaning is endowed upon certain flowers. Prominent among these is the columbine. The columbine (A. vulgaris) ...
Temperate grasslands
Temperate grasslands

...  -Rodents stay active, but burrow underground to avoid the cold.  -Other year-round residents, such as arctic foxes, lose their brown summer coat for white fur that camouflages them with the snow. ...
Chaparral -
Chaparral -

... • below snow line; is frost tolerant, but not snow tolerant. • Most are evergreen with waxy or resinous coverings, not drought deciduous. • Strong north - South slope effect, large/small leaves • Sclerophyllous (very tough, rigid leaves). – Long lived and well protected leaves. – Stiff leaves, with ...
Columbine flowers
Columbine flowers

... In the religion and mythology of every ancient nation, the garden, fragrant with the varied sights and smells of beautiful flowers, is portrayed as the natural habitat of gods. Often sacred meaning is endowed upon certain flowers. Prominent among these is the columbine. The columbine (A. vulgaris) ...
Poinsettia thrips
Poinsettia thrips

... can be expected to be introduced to yet further countries, including Australia, in association with the widespread trade and transport of particular species of decorative house plants. As a member of the family Thripidae, adults of this thrips have two pairs of slender wings that bear marginal fring ...
Poinsettia thrips
Poinsettia thrips

... can be expected to be introduced to yet further countries, including Australia, in association with the widespread trade and transport of particular species of decorative house plants. As a member of the family Thripidae, adults of this thrips have two pairs of slender wings that bear marginal fring ...
invasive plant cards
invasive plant cards

... absorbs water and nutrients from the soil, making it difficult for other plants to grow and survive in that area. It is a nitrogen-fixer, which means that it makes nitrogen that is released into the soil. This extra nitrogen helps invasive plant species grow quickly, out-competing the native plants ...
Weedy Grass Control - Pend Oreille County
Weedy Grass Control - Pend Oreille County

... cool and warm season grasses. It gets started soon after a late fall rain and is able to out compete other vegetation in the spring. ...
Nonvascular Plants: No water-conducting cells (xylem)
Nonvascular Plants: No water-conducting cells (xylem)

... Division Anthophyta, the angiosperms, or flowering plants, contains 99.5% of all extant plant species, as well as 80% of all living plants. First appearing in the Cretaceous period, angiosperms contain several key adaptations that allowed them to become dominant in the plant world. First of all, ang ...
Lecture 12: Gymnosperms and Angiosperms
Lecture 12: Gymnosperms and Angiosperms

... • Live up to 2000 years in these extreme conditions! • Only makes two leaves throughout its life. It takes water from sea mist ...
Knotweed
Knotweed

... growing season, and in subsequent years, until no new shoots appear. An alternate method involves chopping stems near their base and covering them with thick, black plastic and mulch. While this has slowed the weed’s spread, it has not eradicated it. The thickness of the mulch seems to be a factor a ...
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Perovskia atriplicifolia



Perovskia atriplicifolia (/pəˈrɒvskiə ætrɪplɪsɪˈfoʊliə/), commonly called Russian sage, is a flowering herbaceous perennial plant and subshrub. Although not a member of Salvia, the genus of other plants commonly called sage, it is closely related to them. It has an upright habit, typically reaching 0.5–1.2 m (1 ft 8 in–3 ft 11 in) tall, with square stems and gray-green leaves that yield a distinctive odor when crushed, but it is best known for its flowers. Its flowering season extends from mid-summer to as late as October, with blue to violet blossoms arranged into showy, branched panicles.Native to the steppes and hills of southwestern and central Asia, it was introduced to cultivation by Vasily Perovsky in the 19th century. Successful over a wide range of climate and soil conditions, it has since become popular and widely planted. Several cultivars have been developed, differing primarily in leaf shape and overall height; 'Blue Spire' is the most common. This variation has been widely used in gardens and landscaping. P. atriplicifolia was the Perennial Plant Association's 1995 Plant of the Year, and the 'Blue Spire' cultivar received the Award of Garden Merit from the Royal Horticultural Society.The species has a long history of use in traditional medicine in its native range, where it is employed as a treatment for a variety of ailments. This has led to the investigation of its phytochemistry. Its flowers can be eaten in salads or crushed for dyemaking, and the plant has been considered for potential use in the phytoremediation of contaminated soil.
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