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Yucca filamentosa flowers with water drops close up
Close shot of Scilla bifolia, the alpine squill or two-leaf squill in a forest.
Close-up of Potato plants in bloom against dark background. White and yellow flowers of Solanum tuberosum
Blue sky and a big tree on the meadow
Solitary Oak Tree in Green Field under Blue Sky with some clouds in Spring
2015 08 08 Whiffin Spit-1016-2_Laetiporus Cincinnatus, Chicken of the Woods
goldenrain tree flowers in the garden
Horizontal closeup photo of buds on white Agapanthus flower heads growing on plants in a Summer garden. Soft focus background.
White poisonous mushroom, Ookinuhadatomayatake (straw fibrecap, Unconfirmed close up macro photography)
Fomitopsis pinicola (Swartz ex Fr.) Karsten. Fichtenporling Unguline marginee. Fruit body perennial; no stem. Up to 38cm across, 20cm wide, 15cm thick, convex to hoof-shaped, with a thickened, rounded margin; upper surface with a sticky reddish-brown resinous crust, then grayish to brown or black; hard, woody, smooth or glossy-looking. Tubes up to 6mm deep per season; cream to buff. Pores 5-6 per mm, circular; surface cream-colored. Flesh up to 12cm thick, corky, hard, woody; cream to buff, sometimes zoned. Spores cylindrical ellipsoid, smooth, 6-9 x 3.5-4.5µ. Deposit whitish. Hyphal structure trimitic; clamps present. Habitat on dead conifer stumps and logs and occasionally on living trees. Found throughout Europe and most of North America except the South from Texas eastward. Season all year. Not edible. Comment The most commonly collected polypore in North America. The cap colors are rather variable (source R. Phillips).\n\nThis beautiful Species is nowadays quite common in the Netherlands and growing on different Trees.
Heracleum  sosnowskyi growing in the woods on a sunny summer day in Norway in Bergen.
Galanthus nivalis was described by the Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus in his Species Plantarum in 1753, and given the specific epithet nivalis, meaning snowy (Galanthus means with milk-white flowers).
Golden lace (Patrinia scabiosifolia) is a Valerianaceae perennial plant that produces many yellow florets at the tips of stems in summer.
Mt.Takao, Tokyo, Japan (Oct-2022)
Growing bulbs in the garden.
Can be used as inspiration to enjoy the nature.
Many bright yellow flowers of evening primrose in June
Fomitopsis pinicola (Swartz ex Fr.) Karsten. Fichtenporling Unguline marginee. Fruit body perennial; no stem. Up to 38cm across, 20cm wide, 15cm thick, convex to hoof-shaped, with a thickened, rounded margin; upper surface with a sticky reddish-brown resinous crust, then grayish to brown or black; hard, woody, smooth or glossy-looking. Tubes up to 6mm deep per season; cream to buff. Pores 5-6 per mm, circular; surface cream-colored. Flesh up to 12cm thick, corky, hard, woody; cream to buff, sometimes zoned. Spores cylindrical ellipsoid, smooth, 6-9 x 3.5-4.5µ. Deposit whitish. Hyphal structure trimitic; clamps present. Habitat on dead conifer stumps and logs and occasionally on living trees. Found throughout Europe and most of North America except the South from Texas eastward. Season all year. Not edible. Comment The most commonly collected polypore in North America. The cap colors are rather variable (source R. Phillips).\n\nThis beautiful Species is nowadays quite common in the Netherlands and growing on different Trees.
A bunch of green flowers with yellow centers. The flowers are in a field and are surrounded by grass
Pear trees in blossom, mid April, springtime in Switzerland!
Green and orange grass and weeds. Flat lay.
Eranthis in early spring in Frederiksberg Have, one of the major parks in Copenhagen
Material of Chinese Abelia blooming on the side of the road
blooming honeysuckle, shallow depth of field
Yellow Ficaria verna flower also Known as Ranunculus ficaria, lesser celandine or pilewort, growing in the hills or the Provence region of the southern France
Low to medium, rather variable, rhizomatous, hairless perennial with fans of fleshy, sword-shaped leaves, basal often orange-tinged; stem leaves small and bract-like, the upper larger than the lower. Flowers greenish-yellow or orange-yellow, 10-16mmstarry, in a rather lax spike like raceme; filaments of stamens densely hairy. Fruit a small narrow, elliptical capsule, to 12mm long.\nHabitat: Bogs and wet acid heaths and moors, to 1200m.\nFlowering Season: July-September.\nDistribution: Throughout Europe, except the far north.\nGenerally regarded as poisonous, especially to livestock.\n\nThis Picture is made during a Vacation to Ireland in July 2022.
Common tansy,\nTanacetum vulgare summer yellow flowers closeup selective focus
Scotch broom is a pretty, yellow wildflower similar to gorse. Here it is planted deliberately as part of an urban floral garden display. We think of a broom as a brush or besom, but in Scotland, a brush called a sguab could be made from Scotch broom bound with wire and fitted to a birch handle. Broom is a toxic plant. A Scottish farm lady named Maggy Johnston was famed for her intoxicating brew: Some said it was the pith of Broom, That she stow'd in her masking-loom, Which in our heads rais'd sic a foom; Or some wild seed, Which aft the chaping stoup did toom, But fill'd our head. (From (Elegy on Maggy Johnston), who died in 1711.).
Fungus from the Boletaceae family, known as sponge mushrooms, in El Chico National Park.
A macro of the flower of the lesser celandine (Ranunculus ficaria)
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