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Dasiphora fruticosa is still widely referenced in the horticultural literature under its synonym Potentilla fruticosa. Common names include shrubby cinquefoil , [ 2 ] golden hardhack , [ 2 ] bush cinquefoil , [ 2 ] shrubby five-finger , [ 3 ] widdy , [ 2 ] kuril tea [ 4 ] and tundra rose .
Potentilla versicolor is a herbaceous perennial or near-subshrub growing from a thick taproot or woody caudex. Its leaves are pinnately compound, with the leaflets deeply palmately divided, and may be covered in sparse, soft hairs. The exact shape of the leaf and the degree of hairiness can vary substantially between early-season leaves and ...
Potentilla lindleyi, commonly known as wedgeleaf horkelia, is a species of flowering plant in the rose family. [1] It is endemic to California , where it grows in coastal chaparral communities and sandy areas.
Potentilla micheneri is a species of flowering plant in the rose family. [2] It is known by the common names Santa Rosa oceanspray , [ 1 ] Santa Rosa horkelia and thin-lobed horkelia and is endemic to California , where it is known only from the coastal hills and mountains north of the San Francisco Bay Area .
Drymocallis is a genus of plants formerly (and sometimes still) included with the typical cinquefoils (Potentilla). It contains three species known or suspected to be protocarnivorous, [1] but more cinquefoils might eventually be moved here: [2] [3] Drymocallis arguta (Pursh) Rydb. – tall cinquefoil, cream cinquefoil; Drymocallis glandulosa ...
This smoothie combines lite coconut milk, mango, and pineapple. The cashews and hemp hearts add a little extra protein, while the banana and dates add sweetness.
Potentilla simplex is a familiar plant with prostrate stems that root at nodes, with yellow flowers and 5-parted palmately pinnate leaves arising from stolons (runners) on separate stalks. Complete flowers bearing 5 yellow petals (about 4–10 mm long) bloom from March to June. It bears seed from April to July.
Potentilla santolinoides, also known as silver mousetail, [1] stellariopsis, [1] Sierra mousetail [citation needed] and mousetail ivesia, [2] is a species of flowering plant in the rose family. [3] It is endemic to California where it grows in several mountain ranges, including the Sierra Nevada and Transverse Ranges .