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Caltha palustris, known as marsh-marigold [1] and kingcup, is a small to medium sized perennial herbaceous plant of the buttercup family, native to marshes, fens, ditches and wet woodland in temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere. It flowers between April and August, dependent on altitude and latitude, but occasional flowers may occur at ...
Calla palustris: marsh calla, wild calla, water-arum Araceae: The plant is very poisonous when fresh due to its high oxalic acid content, but the rhizome (like that of Caladium, Colocasia, and Arum) is edible after drying, grinding, leaching, and boiling. [73] [failed verification] Caltha palustris: marsh-marigold, kingcup Ranunculaceae
Sonchus palustris, (marsh sowthistle) is a plant native to temperate regions of the Europe, Russia, Central Asia, and western China; Stachys palustris, the marsh woundwort, an edible perennial grassland herb species; Stenochlaena palustris an edible medicinal fern species, used in the folk medicines of India and Malaysia
Ranunculaceae (/ r ə n ʌ ŋ k j uː ˈ l eɪ s i ˌ aɪ,-s iː ˌ iː /, buttercup or crowfoot family; Latin rānunculus "little frog", from rāna "frog") is a family of over 2,000 known species of flowering plants in 43 genera, [2] distributed worldwide.
The following is a list of wild edible plants in Mongolian cuisine: Oil. Cannabis sativa; Cereal ... Caltha palustris; Chenopodium acuminatum; Chenopodium album;
Caltha palustris, 'marsh marigold,' leaves edible before flowering but only after extensive boiling. Chenopodium sp., chenopods, used for seeds but leaves are edible at all stages. Clintonia borealis, 'yellow bead-lily', young leaves are edible. Fiddlehead-stage of various ferns, edible after boiling and changes of water.
Lupinus perennis (blue flower) and Caltha palustris shown in a plate from Studies of Plant Life in Canada (1906). Lupinus perennis is used as foodplants by the caterpillars of several Lepidoptera.
And so is the first description as Caltha palustris by Carl Linnaeus in his Genera Plantarum of 1737. But Linnaeus re-describes the species under the same name in Species Plantarum of 1 May 1753, thus providing the correct name. [5] Caltha palustris is a highly variable species. When the growing season is shorter, plants are generally much ...