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After finding this form in a Shanghai graveyard in 1843, the plant explorer Robert Fortune sent it home to England where it became known as E. japonica, the Japanese anemone. European horticulturists crossed the Japanese anemone with E. vitifolia to produce cultivars of the artificial hybrid E. × hybrida .
The Anemone flower, also known as the Windflower, is a relatively maintenance plant. Here's how to plant, grow, and care for them so they bloom. These Low-Maintenance Flowers Are Great for Budding ...
Commonly called Japanese anemone hybrids, the cultivars of E. × hybrida have single, semi-double, or double flowers with white, pink, or purple sepals. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 6 ] At the Chicago Botanic Garden , Rudy experimented with 26 cultivars of fall-blooming anemones over a 5-year period beginning in 1998.
Japanese anemone is a common name for Eriocapitella japonica, a species of flowering plant in the family Ranunculaceae. The common name Japanese anemone is also used for several other species of flowering plants in the genus Eriocapitella, including: Eriocapitella hupehensis; Eriocapitella × hybrida, the Japanese anemone hybrid; Eriocapitella ...
Eriocapitella hupehensis is a perennial herbaceous plant with a rhizome-like root structure.It is a clump-forming plant with 3–5 basal leaves, each with a petiole 5 to 35 cm (2 to 14 in) long.
Anemone (/ ə ˈ n ɛ m ə n iː /) is a genus of flowering plants in the buttercup family Ranunculaceae.Plants of the genus are commonly called windflowers. [2] They are native to the temperate and subtropical regions of all regions except Australia, New Zealand, and Antarctica. [1]
Today we find a large number of Japanese anemone hybrids (E. × hybrida) with single, semi-double, or double flowers having white, pink, or purple sepals. [ 3 ] [ 2 ] [ 9 ] Fall-blooming anemones usually have white or pink blossoms with a globe-shaped seed head.
Corynactis californica is a brightly colored colonial anthozoan corallimorph.Unlike the Atlantic true sea anemone, Actinia fragacea, that bears the same common name, strawberry anemone, this species is a member of the order Corallimorpharia, and is the only member found on the west coast of North America. [2]