Page 8: 86 results for Persicaria
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Question: I am caretaking an urban garden in Concord NH and have had …
...of Persicaria (smartweed) in the Polygonaceae (knotweed family). I cannot tell you which species (in this case) without seeing flowers and/or fruits. If you are able to captures images of the reprod...
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Question: I live in Prince Edward Island, Canada (zone 5B) My vegetable garden …
...of Persicaria (smartweed). It looks like P. coccinea (scarlet smartweed), a native wetland and amphibious plant that can grow in terrestrial habitats. This species is often included in a broadly def...
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Question: Dear Ace Botanist, Looking for help with this little guy. I've visited …
...photographed Persicaria arifolia (halbered-leaved tearthumb), a native smartweed that belongs to the knotweed family. This plant will have a small, densely clustered array of flowers at the apex of t...
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Question: I live in a gated CCRC east across the Rivana from Charlottesville, …
...photographed Persicaria virginiana (jumpseed), a native smartweed in the knotweed family. This is a forest species with small, white, remote flowers that will be tipped by a two styles that curve bac...
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Question: I think this is Potamogeton vaseyi. Am I correct? Am I allowed …
...photographed Persicaria amphibia (water smartweed), a native aquatic plant that produces the beautiful array of flowers held above the surface of the water. It has an amphibious form when it is stran...
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Question: I believe that my photo is of a Persicaria amphibia (Water Smartweed) …
...a Persicaria amphibia (Water Smartweed) but It doesn’t look quite like the other pictures I’ve seen. It was right on the edge of a brook with slow moving water. In fact the water was drained until a f...
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Question: I think this plant is Water Smartweed (Persicaria amphibia) though it doesn't …
...(Persicaria amphibia) though it doesn't look quite like the other photos I have seen. It is located on a brook (slow-moving water) right along the edge. The water was actually drained until just ...
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Bistorta: Dichotomous Key
... Persicaria following the phylogenetic work of Kim and Donoghue (2008). 1a. Inflorescence 3–6 ×0.5–1 cm, bearing sterile flowers in the apical half and bulbils in the basa...
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Question: The parent plant is growing in a friend's yard in western Washington …
...is Persicaria filiformis (a species of smartweed sometimes referred to as "jumpseed"). This member of the knotweed family is native to Asia. It is sometimes cultivated for ornament and lik...
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Question: Hi, I’m trying to identify a plant that is growing in my …
...of Persicaria (smartweed). I can't tell you which species without flowers and close-up image of the stipules (where the leaves attach to the stem), but hopefully knowing the genus will get you s...