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  2. Province flowers of Sweden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Province_flowers_of_Sweden

    The origin of province flowers came from the American idea of state flowers, and was brought to Sweden by August Wickström and Paul Petter Waldenström in 1908. Waldenström published the proposal to introduce province flowers in the May 288, 1908 edition of the newspaper Stockholms Dagblad , and requested suggestions of species from the ...

  3. Plectranthus verticillatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plectranthus_verticillatus

    Plectranthus verticillatus is native to southern Africa where it occurs in the Cape Provinces, KwaZulu-Natal, Eswatini, the Northern Provinces and southern Mozambique. [7] It is found naturalized in El Salvador, Honduras, the Leeward Islands, the Venezuela Antilles, the Windward Islands, Venezuela, Puerto Rico, Hawaii as well as south-east Queensland and coastal areas of New South Wales in ...

  4. Wildlife of Sweden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wildlife_of_Sweden

    Some of the significant challenges Swedish wildlife faces include: Lack of protection for the few remaining old-growth forests, particularly in the north, severely impacts lichens, mosses, and insects. Use of alien species such as the lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta) in forestry, potentially outcompeting the native Scots pine and Norway spruce.

  5. Scandosorbus intermedia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scandosorbus_intermedia

    Scandosorbus intermedia or, formerly, Sorbus intermedia, the Swedish whitebeam, [2] is a species of whitebeam found in southern Sweden, with scattered occurrences in Estonia, Latvia, easternmost Denmark , the far southwest of Finland, and northern Poland.

  6. Sagittaria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sagittaria

    The Indians either boiled this root or roasted it in hot ashes. ... Their katniss is an arrow-head or Sagittaria, and is only a variety of the Swedish arrow-head or Sagittaria sagittifolia, for the plant above the ground is entirely the same, but the root under ground is much greater in the American than in the European. [9]

  7. Dianthus armeria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dianthus_armeria

    Dianthus armeria is a species of open and periodically disturbed sites. It is normally an annual but can be biennial or a short-lived perennial. New leaf rosettes form at the base of old plants from buds located on their roots, demonstrating that this species is in fact a short-lived perennial and has a life-span of less than two and a half years. [6]

  8. Botaniska trädgården (Lund) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Botaniska_trädgården_(Lund)

    Flowers, and herbs in front of the botanical museum. Botaniska trädgården (English: The Botanical Garden) is a botanical garden in central Lund, Sweden, open to the public daily without charge. The 8 hectares site contains 7000 species of plants, of which 2000 are found in the greenhouses representing nine different climate zones.

  9. Trillium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trillium

    In 1753, Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus established the genus Trillium by recognizing three species, Trillium cernuum, Trillium erectum, and Trillium sessile. [9] The type specimen Trillium cernuum described by Linnaeus was actually Trillium catesbaei, [10] an oversight that subsequently led to much confusion regarding the type species of this genus.

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