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  2. Acacia dealbata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acacia_dealbata

    'Mimosa' blossoming in an urban setting in Italy. The flowers and tip shoots are harvested for use as cut flowers, when it is known by the florist trade as "mimosa" (not to be confused with the genus of plants called Mimosa). In Italy, [20] Albania, Russia and Georgia the flowers are also frequently given to women on International Women's Day.

  3. Mimosoideae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mimosoideae

    The Mimosoideae are a traditional subfamily of trees, herbs, lianas, and shrubs in the pea family that mostly grow in tropical and subtropical climates.They are typically characterized by having radially symmetric flowers, with petals that are twice divided (valvate) in bud and with numerous showy, prominent stamens.

  4. Mimosa pudica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mimosa_pudica

    Mimosa pudica was one of the four species that significantly extracted and bioaccumulated the pollutant into its leaves. [25] Other studies have found that Mimosa pudica extracts heavy metals such as copper, lead, tin, and zinc from polluted soils. This allows for the soil to gradually return to less toxic compositions.

  5. Vachellia farnesiana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vachellia_farnesiana

    Vachellia farnesiana, also known as Acacia farnesiana, and previously Mimosa farnesiana, commonly known as sweet acacia, [12] huisache, [13] casha tree, or needle bush, is a species of shrub or small tree in the legume family, Fabaceae. Its flowers are used in the perfume industry.

  6. Acacia sensu lato - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acacia_sensu_lato

    Acacia fasciculifera seedling in the transitional stage between pinnate leaves and phyllodes. The leaves of acacias are compound pinnate in general. In some species, however, more especially in the Australian and Pacific Islands species, the leaflets are suppressed, and the leaf-stalks become vertically flattened in order to serve the purpose of leaves.

  7. Albizia lebbeck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albizia_lebbeck

    In its original description the Mimosa lebbeck was a large Acacia tree that grew in Egypt. [15] George Bentham placed the species in its present genus , but other authors believed that the plant described by Linnaeus was the related Albizia kalkora as described by Prain (based on the Mimosa kalkora of William Roxburgh ), and erroneously ...

  8. Desmanthus virgatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desmanthus_virgatus

    Desmanthus virgatus is a species of flowering plant in the legume family that is known by many common names, including wild tantan, prostrate bundleflower, dwarf koa, desmanto, acacia courant, acacia savane, pompon blank, [4] adormidera, brusca prieta, frijolillo, ground tamarind, guajillo, guashillo, huarangillo, langalet, petit acacia, petit cassie, petit mimosa, virgate mimosa, [5] and ...

  9. Mimosa scabrella - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mimosa_scabrella

    The Cerrado zone is a centre of biodiversity of Mimosa, where about one quarter of all Mimosa species are found. However M. scabrella evolved to grow in colder humid weather south from this region, in a sub-type of Atlantic Forest , called "mixed ombrophilous forest" (also known as Araucaria moist forests ).