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  1. Was this helpful?
  2. minnesotawildflowers.info

    Its taxonomy is confusing; as of this writing, Flora of North America states North American specimens appear to be Odontites vulgaris, but most other references are calling it O. vernus, some calling O. vulgaris a synonym and others keeping them separate species. Any distinctions between the two are vague and not well documented; there are also ...
  3. gobotany.nativeplanttrust.org

    (e.g., GH, NEBC) are not easily assignable to this subspecies and may be O. vernus ssp. vernus, which has bracts 10-15 (-20) mm long that clearly exceed the flowers and ascending to suberect branches (vs. bracts 7-10 mm long that are shorter than the flowers and branches usually spreading in ssp. serotinus).
  4. extension.umn.edu

    Red bartsia (Odontites vernus) is a non-native plant that has been found in Minnesota. Red bartsia is an annual plant that can produce 1,400 seeds per plant. Look for it next to roads and trails and in pastures and hayfields. Please report this species so we can better understand its distribution in ...
  5. wildflowerweb.co.uk

    Odontites vernus, also known as red bartsia or spring bartsia, is a species of flowering plant that is native to Europe. It is a member of the figwort family and is known for its small, red or purple flowers and hairy, sticky leaves. Odontites vernus is an annual or biennial plant that grows up to 50 centimeters (20 inches) tall and has a thin ...
  6. inaturalist.org

    Odontites vernus, the red bartsia, is a wild flower from the figwort family native to Europe and Asia and occurring as an alien in North America. The red bartsia is a common plant in low-fertility soils, where it lives partially as a parasite on the roots of grasses. The red bartsia has pinkish and red flowers from June to September. They prefer dry conditions and full sun light exposure and ...
  7. Odontites vernus. red bartsia. An annual to 50cm tall with slender, upright, branched and downy stems bearing oblong to lance-shaped, toothed leaves up to 3cm long and pink, two-lipped flowers in summer. Commonly found growing wild in grasslands, this annual is semi-parasitic on grass roots
  8. fermanagh.bsbi.org

    Variation. O. vernus (= Bartsia odontites L.) Hudson, O. rubra Gilib.) is a very variable species which is difficult to separate adequately into infraspecific entities. Sometimes segregates are treated as subspecies and at others as species. Three subspecies of O. vernus are now recognised (Stace 1991, 1997), but they have not been distinguished by most of the recorders working in Fermanagh.
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  1. Odontites vernus

    Odontites vernus, the red bartsia, is a wild flower from the family Orobanchaceae native to Europe and Asia and occurring as an alien in North America. The red bartsia is a common plant in low-fertility soils, where it lives partially as a parasite on the roots of grasses. The red bartsia has pinkish and red flowers from June to September. They prefer dry conditions and full sun light exposure and are pollinated by bees and wasps. Over the last 70 years, the red bartsia has disappeared from many woodland locations in the English county of Dorset. In Manitoba, Canada, the plant known as red bartsia is considered a weed. Wikipedia

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