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Want to grow Bleeding Heart? Here's everything you need to know about growing these unique heart-shaped dangling flowers.
The Asian bleeding-heart grows to 120 cm tall and 45 cm wide. It is a rhizomatous herbaceous perennial with 3-lobed compound leaves on fleshy green to pink stems. The arching horizontal racemes of up to 20 pendent flowers are borne in spring and early summer.
Homalanthus populifolius, the bleeding heart, native poplar or Queensland poplar, is an Australian rainforest plant in the family Euphorbiaceae. It often appears in areas of rainforest disturbance. Bleeding heart is highly regarded by rainforest regenerators because of its fast growth and use as a pioneer species in rainforest regeneration.
Dicentra (Greek dís "twice", kéntron "spur"), [3] known collectively as the bleeding-hearts, is a genus containing eight species of herbaceous flowering perennial plants with unique, "heart"-shaped flowers and finely divided foliage. The species are, primarily, native to North America, although several are found in temperate East Asia.
Bleeding-heart, flowering shrubs, lianas, or small trees of the mint family Lamiaceae, in the genus Clerodendrum (also called glorybowers or bagflowers) Bleeding heart tree ( Homalanthus populifolius ), of the family Euphorbiaceae, an Australian rainforest plant, also known as Queensland poplar
The leaf blade is hairless, heart-shaped or triangular, 7 to 12 cm (3 to 5 in) long by 6 to 8 cm (2.4 to 3.1 in) wide, with a smooth, untoothed margin. The underside is often greyish and mature leaves turn red as they age. The inflorescence is a terminal yellowish-green spike, the male and female flowers being separate.
Clerodendrum is a genus of flowering plants formerly placed in the family Verbenaceae, but now considered to belong to the Lamiaceae (mint) family.Its common names include glorybower, bagflower, pagoda flower and bleeding-heart.
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