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The leaves are compound, up to 50 centimetres (20 in) long and clustered at the ends of the branches. [1] The flowers are white, [1] or cream [2] and produced on branched flowering heads at the ends of the branches. [1] The fruit are rounded; green and velvety when young to yellow and smooth when ripe. [1]
Passiflora lutea, commonly known as yellow passionflower, [1] is a flowering perennial vine in the family Passifloraceae, native to the central and eastern United States.The vine has three-lobed leaves and small, yellowish-green, fringed flowers that appear in the summer, followed by green fruit that turn almost black at maturity.
Melilotus officinalis can be an annual or biennial plant, and is 120–180 centimetres (4–6 ft) high at maturity. [3] Leaves alternate on the stem and possess three leaflets. Yellow flowers bloom in spring and summer and produce fruit in pods typically containing one seed. Seeds can be viable for up to 30 years.
The leaves are bright green in color and slightly paler underneath. They become bright yellows, oranges, purples and reds in the autumn. The tree is monoecious, producing male and female flowers on the same plant. The waxy green leaves set off the clusters of greenish-yellow and white flowers at bloom time.
In the fall, the leaves turn a mix of yellow, gold, and orange. [citation needed] The flowers are fragrant, white, produced in Wisteria-like racemes 15–30 cm long. Flowering is in early summer (June in its native region), and is variable from year to year, with heavy flowering every second or third year.
In the sun, the leaves are a vibrant green color, and in shade, the leaves are a lighter yellow-green. [4] The underside of the leaves is a blue-green color and in the fall, the leaves take on a purple color. [5] The flowers are 3–5 cm in diameter, a rich yellow, with five petals and numerous yellow stamens. Its flowers can be described as ...
The leaves form a basal rosette at ground level, and then spirally arranged up the stem; they can be entire, toothed or pinnate, and range from 1–15 cm (0.4–5.9 in) long. The flowers are produced in a slender spike, each flower small (4–6 mm (0.16–0.24 in) diameter), white, yellow, orange, or green, with four to six petals.
Cascabela thevetia is cultivated as an ornamental plant, and planted as large flowering shrub or small ornamental tree standards in gardens and parks in temperate climates. In frost prone areas it is container plant, in the winter season brought inside a greenhouse or as a house plant. It tolerates most soils and is drought tolerant. [5]