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Trifolium pratense (from Latin prātum, meaning meadow), red clover, [2] [3] is a herbaceous species of flowering plant in the bean family, Fabaceae. It is native to the Old World, but planted and naturalised in many other regions.
The flowers are white or rosy, and resemble those of Trifolium repens. Trifolium medium, meadow or zigzag clover, a perennial with straggling flexuous stems and rose-purple flowers, [3] has potential for interbreeding with T. pratense to produce perennial crop plants. [8]
Slafractonia leguminicola (formerly Rhizoctonia leguminicola) is a fungus that is a plant pathogen that most often attaches itself to the Trifolium pratense or red clover. It is also called black patch disease. The infection is first seen as small black patches on the leaves of red clover (often on the bottom of the leaves first) and spreads to ...
The results show that there is no one "true" species of shamrock, but that Trifolium dubium (lesser clover) is considered to be the shamrock by roughly half of Irish people, and Trifolium repens (white clover) by another third, with the remaining sixth split between Trifolium pratense (red clover), Medicago lupulina (black medick), Oxalis acetosella (wood sorrel), and various other species of ...
Trifolium repens: White Clover: Grass or Forb species capable of accumulating radionuclides [6] Cs-137: H: Zea mays: Corn: High absorption rate. Accumulates radionuclides. [16] Contains 2 to 3 times more Cs137 in his roots than in the biomass above ground. [19] [1] [6] [10] Co: 1000 to 4304 [22] Haumaniastrum robertii : Copper flower
The red clover (Trifolium pratense) was designated as the state flower by the Vermont General Assembly in 1895. [2] The red clover is often seen in the countryside of Vermont hosting the state insect – the western honey bee (Apis mellifera), designated by Act 124 of the 1978 biennial session of the Vermont General Assembly.
Trifolium repens, the white clover, is a herbaceous perennial plant in the bean family Fabaceae (otherwise known as Leguminosae). It is native to Europe , including the British Isles, [ 2 ] and central Asia and is one of the most widely cultivated types of clover .
Medicago sativa Medicago x varia Melilotus albus Melilotus officinalis Trifolium medium Trifolium pratense Trifolium repens. Andira inermis DC. Amburana cearensis (= Torresea cearensis M.Allemão) A.C.Smith; Centrolobium robustum Mart. ex Benth. Gliricidia sepium Steud; Geoffraea spinosa Jacq. Machaerium acutifolium Vogel