Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Stachys coccinea, the scarlet hedgenettle [1] or Texas betony, is an ornamental plant of the family Lamiaceae, which is native from Arizona to Texas and from Baja California Sur, Mexico to Nicaragua. [2] Some cultivars of this species include:
Betonica officinalis, common name betony [2] [3] [4] is a species of flowering plant in the mint family Lamiaceae, native to Europe, western Asia, and northern Africa. [1] Other vernacular names include wood betony, [ 5 ] common hedgenettle, [ 6 ] purple betony, bishopwort, or bishop's wort.
Conoclinium betonicifolium, the betony-leaf mistflower or betonyleaf thoroughwort, is a North American species of flowering plants in the family Asteraceae. It is widespread across much of Mexico from Chihuahua to Quintana Roo , and has also been found in Texas and Guatemala .
Common names include hedgenettle, [6] heal-all, self-heal, woundwort, betony, and lamb's ears. Wood betony , S. officinalis , was the most important medicinal herb to the Anglo-Saxons of early medieval England, and was used for many medicinal purposes from Ancient Roman times to the Early Modern period.
Stachys floridana is a species of betony in the mint family, Lamiaceae. It is native to the United States, where its true native range is probably limited to Florida, but today it is known throughout the Southeast as an introduced species and common weed. [1] [2] It occurs as far west as Texas, [2] and it has been recorded in California. [3]
Betony is a common name for a plant which may refer to: Stachys, a genus of plants containing several species commonly known as betony in Europe Stachys officinalis, a historically important medicinal plant; Stachys palustris, a related plant with similar uses.
Phyteuma betonicifolium, common name betony-leaved rampion, [2] is a species of flowering plant in the family Campanulaceae. [ 3 ] Distribution of Phyteuma betonicifolium
Common name Scientific name Image Year Alabama: Camellia (state flower) Camellia japonica: 1959 (clarified 1999) [1] Oak-leaf hydrangea (state wildflower) Hydrangea quercifolia: 1999 [2] Alaska: Forget-me-not: Myosotis alpestris: 1917 [3] American Samoa: Paogo (Ulafala) Pandanus tectorius: 1973 [4] Arizona: Saguaro cactus blossom: Carnegiea ...