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2010.07.04 Czech Republic, esk Krumlov (mixed forest - mainly broadleaf, umava national park 825 m AMSL).Both are common, Filipendula flowering from june till august, Lupinus from june till september.Lupinus is not native and potentially invasive; the plant was introduced not only as ornamental plant but also as fodder (for deer too, seeded in forests) and for re-greening of roadside slopes after construction work - both worked (and still works) in favour of establishing this one in the Central European fauna.While Lupinus is potentially invasive it isn't as 'dangerous' as other species - actually it seems that Lupinus, a typical pioneering plant, is disappearing from habitats as soon as more competitive native plants manage to establish themselves there.German names: Gewhnliches Gross-Mdesss (Filipendula); Stauden-Lupine (Lupinus)ID: Fischer & al., Exkursionsflora (2008 3rd)
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Alaro, Balearic Islands, Spain
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Tanga, Tanzania
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Enterolobium gummiferum (Mart.) J.F.Macbr.FABACEAE Local: Jardim Botnico, Braslia, Brasil.Ref.: Silva Jr., M.C. 100 rvores do Cerrado. Rede de Sementes do Cerrado, 2005.
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Ontario, Canada
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Queensland, Australia
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Queensland, Australia
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Alcornocales N.P., Andalucia, Spain
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7 September 2002Teline monspessulana, Montpellier broom (Plant, Fabaceae), New Zealand: NaturalisedClear cut pine boundary, clearcut transect, R12Rotorua area, Bay of PlentyNZMS 260 U15 067 559
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This is a dainty shrub, slender, trailing and twining with tiny flowers. It grows in wet areas such as creek lines. It often grows up among other plants. Here it is growing in a damp area and is returning after a burn. It flowers between October and December. Photo: Jean
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Family: FabaceaeDistribution: Common in waste places. Found in Tropical Africa, India and Mauritius.Photographed at Nellore.0.5to 1m tall herbs, branches villous,. Leaves 3-8cm long, imparipinnate; leaflets 11-15,0.5-1.8x0.3-0.8cm, oblong, emarginate and mucronate base cuneate, silky beneath. Flowers 0.8-1cm long, pink, fascicled on 4-10cm long leaf-opposed or terminal racemes. Pods2-4x0.2-0.5cm, linear, wooly, linear oblong 6-9 seeded.
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Desmodium adscendens (Sw.) DC.FABACEAELocal: Local: Porto de Pedras, Alagoas, Brasil.Ref.: Lorenzi, H. Plantas Daninhas do Brasil. 4 edio. Plantarum, 2008.
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Trifolium noricum WulfenEN: ?, DE: Norische Klee, IT.: Trifoglio noricoSlo.: norika deteljaDat.: June 30. 2009Lat.: 46.41731 Long.: 13.43624Code: Bot_359/2009_DSC0704andDat.: June 30. 2009Lat.: 46.42251 Long.: 13.43832Code: Bot_359/2009_DSC0834Habitat: South-west inclined mountain slope, stony alpine grassland, full sun, dry and relatively warm place, calcareous ground, exposed to direct precipitations, average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 2-4 deg C, elevation 1.830 m (6.000 feet), alpine phytogeographical region. Substratum: soil.Place: 'Pecol' flats, south-west of 'Hude police' in the Mt. Monta (Mt. Montassio), 2.753 m (9.033 feet) mountain group, West Julian Alps, Friuli Venezia Giulia, Italy EC.Comment: Trifolium Noricum is a typical South Alpine plant growing in a relatively small region of the Alps in northeast Italy and northwest Slovenia. In east-west direction it spreads from Dolomites to Julian Alps. It doesn't protrude much to the north. Already in our northern neighbor Austria it is considered a rare plant (Ref.: (1)). Contrary, it can be abundantly found more south in Apennines and Balkan Peninsula. This plant, which thrives in Slovenia only at high elevations from 1.600 to 2.000 m (Ref.: (4)), is beautiful in its appearance since its flower heads can measure up to 4 cm in diameter. It can be recognized by milky-white, stalk-less flowers and calyx with ten nerves and five more or less equally long teeth (see Fig. 10). Uppermost small and narrow leaves just below the flower heads are few and are allover softly hairy.Ref.:(1) M.A. Fischer, W. Adler, K. Oswald, Exkursionsflora sterreich Liechtenstein, Suedtirol, LO Landesmuseen, Linz, Austria (2005), p 567.(2) A. Martini et all., Mala Flora Slovenije, Tehnina Zaloba Slovenije (2007), p 304. (3) L. Poldini, Nuovo Atlante corologico delle piante vascolarinel Friuli Venezia Giulia,University of Trieste (2002), p498.(4) T. Wraber, 2 x Sto alpskih rastlin na Slovenskem (in Slovene),(2 x Hundred Alpine Plants of Slovenia), Preernova Druba (2007), p 93.(5) O. Angerer, T. Muer, Alpenpflanzen, Ulmer (2004), p 213.
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Coles Bay, Tasmania, Australia
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This Lord Howe Island endemic tree is related to the Hawaiian Mamane (Sophora chrysophylla) and other insular endemics in the Edwardsia section of Sophora (Fabaceae). This one grew from a seed from Lord Howe Island and flowers in a tub in my yard most years in January/February. Image I10-5843
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Western Australia, Australia
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Inyo milkvetch, Astragalus inyoensis, White Mountains, elevation 2055 m (6740 ft)
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Audley, New South Wales, Australia
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