enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Datura - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Datura

    Datura species are herbaceous, leafy annuals and short-lived perennials, which can reach up to 2 m in height. The leaves are alternate, 10–20 cm long, and 5–18 cm broad, with a lobed or toothed margin. The flowers are erect or spreading (not pendulous like those of Brugmansia), trumpet-shaped, 5–20 cm long, and 4–12 cm broad at the ...

  3. Harpagophytum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harpagophytum

    H. zeyheri Decne. Harpagophytum (/ ˌhɑːrpəˈɡɒfɪtəm / HAR-pə-GOF-it-əm), also called grapple plant, wood spider, and most commonly devil's claw, is a genus of plants in the sesame family, native to southern Africa. Plants of the genus owe their common name "devil's claw" to the peculiar appearance of their hooked fruit.

  4. Datura stramonium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Datura_stramonium

    Datura stramonium is an erect, annual, freely branching herb that forms a bush up to 60 to 150 cm (2 to 5 ft) tall. [10][11][12] The root is long, thick, fibrous, and white. The stem is stout, erect, leafy, smooth, and pale yellow-green to reddish purple in color. The stem forks off repeatedly into branches and each fork forms a leaf and a ...

  5. Atropa belladonna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atropa_belladonna

    Atropa belladonna, commonly known as belladonna or deadly nightshade, is a toxic perennial herbaceous plant in the nightshade family Solanaceae, [1] which also includes tomatoes, potatoes and aubergine (eggplant). It is native to Europe and Western Asia, including Turkey. Its distribution extends from Ireland in the west to western Ukraine and ...

  6. Datura innoxia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Datura_innoxia

    Datura innoxia is quite similar to D. metel, to the point of being confused with it in early scientific literature. D. metel is a closely related plant, believed until recently to be of Old World provenance (though now thought to have been brought to Asia from the Antilles no earlier than the sixteenth century) and misconstrued as being referred to in the works of Avicenna in eleventh century ...

  7. Solanum torvum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solanum_torvum

    Solanum torvum is a bushy, erect and spiny perennial plant The plant is usually 2 or 3 m in height and 2 cm in basal diameter, but may reach 5m in height and 8 cm in basal diameter. The shrub usually has a single stem at ground level, but it may branch on the lower stem. The stem bark is gray and nearly smooth with raised lenticels.

  8. Tribulus terrestris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tribulus_terrestris

    Thumbtack-like Tribulus terrestris burs are a hazard to bare feet and bicycle tires.. After the flower blooms, a fruit develops that easily falls apart into five burs. [3] The burs are hard and bear two to four sharp spines, [3] 10 mm (0.39 in) long and 4–6 mm (0.16–0.24 in) broad point-to-point.

  9. Solanum linnaeanum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solanum_linnaeanum

    Solanum linnaeanum. Solanum linnaeanum is a nightshade species known as devil's apple and, in some places where it is introduced, apple of Sodom. The latter name is also used for other nightshades and entirely different plants elsewhere, in particular the poisonous milkweed Calotropis procera. [1]