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Netflix’s newest true crime drama, “The Asunta Case,” unpacks a murder that stunned the Spanish public in the early 2010s, when a Chinese-born girl adopted by Spanish parents was found dead ...
Cornus florida, the flowering dogwood, is a species of flowering tree in the family Cornaceae native to eastern North America and northern Mexico. An endemic population once spanned from southernmost coastal Maine south to northern Florida and west to the Mississippi River. [ 4 ]
The story at the center of Netflix’s latest true crime drama, “The Asunta Case,” is captivating, horrifying and real. The series is now the top non-English language series on Netflix in the ...
5 Brevard: 43 2 6 Broward: 40 0 7 Calhoun: 2 0 8 Charlotte: 17 0 9 Citrus: 10 1 10 Clay: 24 0 11 Collier: 19 0 12 Columbia: 12 0 13 DeSoto: 5 0 14 Dixie: 2 0 15 Duval: 110 2 16 Escambia: 42 3 17 Flagler: 13 0 18 Franklin: 10 1 19 Gadsden: 18 0 20 Gilchrist: 2 0 21 Glades: 3 0 22 Gulf: 4 0 23 Hamilton: 5 0 24 Hardee: 3 0 25 Hendry: 12 0 26 ...
The ornamental plump, round, crimson fruit appears in summer and fall (autumn) at the same time as the blooms. In moderate, coastal areas the fruits appear through the year. The fruit can be eaten out of hand or made into pies, jams, jellies, and sauces. [4] Some claim that other than the fruit, the plant is poisonous. [5]
If the cutting does not die from rot-inducing fungi or desiccation first, roots grow from the buried portion of the cutting to become a new complete plant. However, although this works well for some plants (such as figs and olives ), for most fruit tree cultivars this method has much too low a success rate to be commercially viable.
Dracaena draco, the Canary Islands dragon tree or drago, [4] is a subtropical tree in the genus Dracaena, native to the Canary Islands, Cape Verde, Madeira, western Morocco, and possibly introduced into the Azores. [5] It was first described by Carl Linnaeus in 1762 as Asparagus draco. [3] [6] In 1767 he assigned it to the new genus, Dracaena ...
Dracaena (/ d r ə ˈ s iː n ə / [2]) is a genus of about 200 species of trees and succulent shrubs. [3] The formerly accepted genera Pleomele and Sansevieria are now included in Dracaena.