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  1. More Images

    Trinia glauca

    Trinia glauca is a low-growing umbellifer found in rocky areas. Wikipedia

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  2. en.wikipedia.org

    Trinia glauca (honewort) is a low-growing umbellifer found in rocky areas. Description. Honewort is a low-growing glabrous plant. Its stems can reach 20 cm, and are surrounded by abundant fibrous remains of petioles at the base. It is much-branched, with the branches spreading at a wide angle. The leaves are glaucous, and are 2- to 3- times ...
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  4. botanykaren.net

    Honewort, Trinia glauca, is a Somerset rarity that is easily overlooked. It does not wave about in the breeze right under your nose like many other umbelliferous members of the Apiaceae or Carrot family. It hugs dry, limestone ground and rocky outcrops. Nonetheless, I found it eye-catching this May at Sand Point because it flowered … Continue reading Somerset's Rare Honewort
  5. avongorge.org.uk

    Honewort Scientific name: Trinia glauca Status: Nationally rare Flowering time: Small white flowers May - June Description: Grows up to 34 cm with small white umbrella-like flowers. Separate male and female plants, pollinated by ants. Plants die after flowering, but may take up to 16 years to flower. Social history: This plant was first found
  6. powo.science.kew.org

    Trinia glauca (L.) Dumort. First published in Fl. Belg.: 78 (1827) This species is accepted The native range of this species is Europe to N. Iran. It is a perennial and grows primarily in the temperate biome. Taxonomy; Images; General information; Distribution; Synonyms; Accepted Infraspecifics ...
  7. somersetrareplantsgroup.org.uk

    Trinia glauca is found only from Berry Head to Sharkham Point in S. Devon (VC3), in the Avon Gorge in W. Gloucestershire (VC34) and at the above-mentioned sites in N. Somerset. It is feared lost from several sites where it was known in the 1980s and 1990s, perhaps due to lack
  8. wildflowerweb.co.uk

    Trinia glauca, also known as the Blue Flax-lily, is a species of perennial flowering plant in the genus Tricoryne. It is native to Australia, and is commonly found in the eastern regions of Victoria, New South Wales and Queensland. The plant has a clump-forming habit and typically grows up to 1 meter tall, with narrow, grass-like leaves.
  9. besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com

    implications for the management of trinia glauca. Given that T. glauca is a rare plant species with a highly fragmented distribution, it could be at high risk of extinction (Lawton 1995; Aguilar et al. 2006; Pocock et al. 2006). The maintenance of its pollinators is essential if its conservation is to be sustainable in the long term.
  10. species.wikimedia.org

    Trinia glauca in The Plant List Version 1.1. Published online. Accessed: 2017 Sep 16. Tropicos.org 2017. Trinia glauca. Missouri Botanical Garden. Published online. Accessed: 16 Sep 2017. Vernacular names [edit] Deutsch: Blaugrüner Faserschirm. For more multimedia, look at Trinia glauca on Wikimedia Commons.
  11. wildbristol.uk

    Trinia glauca (L.) Dumort. - Honewort. Stems erect, to 20cm, with dense sheath of fibres at base; female plants with longer, more unequal rays and fewer, longer-pedicelled flowers than male plants; fruits 2.3-3mm; (2n=18). Native; dry limestone turf; very local in South Devon, North Somerset and West Gloucestershire, possibly formerly Sussex.

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