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Senecio squalidus, known as Oxford ragwort, [6] is a flowering plant in the daisy family Asteraceae. It is a yellow-flowered herbaceous plant, native to mountainous, rocky or volcanic areas, that has managed to find other homes on man-made and natural piles of rocks, war-ruined neighborhoods and dry-stone walls .
Senecio squalidus, Oxford ragwort; Senecio viscosus, sticky ragwort; Certain members of the genus Jacobaea (a segregate of Senecio): Jacobaea vulgaris, (common) ragwort or, only in the USA tansy ragwort, a very common wild flower in Europe, widely naturalised elsewhere; Jacobaea aquatica, water ragwort, marsh ragwort; Jacobaea erucifolia, Hoary ...
Also, fennel flower. Bitterwort - Gentiana lutea. Bladderwort - Utricularia (aquatic plants). Blawort - A flower, commonly called harebell. Also, a certain plant bearing blue flowers. Bloodwort - Sanguinaria canadensis. Produces escharotic alkaloids that corrode skin, leaving wounds. More commonly known as bloodroot, or sometimes tetterwort.
Geranium maculatum, an Ohio native, is a relative of the common bedding geranium (Pelargonium × hortorum). This list includes plants native and introduced to the state of Ohio , designated (N) and (I), respectively.
Tephroseris palustris grows in areas that have freezing winters [9] and in moist to wet soils, such as damp meadows, swamps, sandy pond edges [5] and roadside ditches [10] at altitudes of 0 to 3,300 feet (1,000 m) [4] It is the most common annual plant species in the eastern Canadian Arctic.
The ragwort, under its Manx name Cushag, is the national flower of the Isle of Man [47] According to one story King Orry chose as his emblem the cushag flower, as its twelve petals represent one of the isles of the Kingdom of Mann and the Isles: the Isle of Man, Arran, Bute, Islay, Jura, Mull, Iona, Eigg, Rum, Skye, Raasay, and the Outer Hebrides.
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The seedlings of S. ampullaceus often have a purplish color on the undersides of their leaves in the winter, especially along their midrib. [3] Flowering in early–mid spring, [7] Texas ragwort is a tall annual, [8] growing to from 20 centimeters (7.9 in) to 80 centimeters (31 in) tall and similar to S. quaylei.