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St. john's wort (hypericum perforatum) in the meadow
red-blue Columbian Tetra Hyphessobrycon aquarium fish
closeup of the bright yellow foliage of 'White Gold' bleeding heart. Lamprocapnos Dicentra spectabilis. High quality photo
Motherwort Herb
Allium ursinum en fleur.
Close shot of white corydalis cava.
This image was taken in  Nagano.
Streamside Lotus, Hosackia pinnata, a dicot, is a perennial herb that is native to California and found in Modini Mayacamas Preserve,  Sonoma County, California.
Close up of yellow Rhododendron flowers in bloom
Blue cardinal flower (Lobelia siphilitica) in a pollinator meadow at a Connecticut nature preserve, September. Also known as great blue lobelia.
beautiful and colorful flowers, rose, lotus
Buttercup (Ranunculus acris)
spiky yucca gloriosa with sword-shaped leaves and large terminal panicles of white or whitish flowers.
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).
Digitally restored from a late 19th Century encyclopedia.
Evening primrose. Oenothera biennis.
evening primrose yellow flowers macro
Canadian burnet (Sanguisorba canadensis) close-up in a Connecticut flower garden, summer
Wisteria flowers are in the botanical garden, North China
Orthosiphon aristatus, commonly called Cat’s whiskers, is a plant in Lamiaceae family, native to tropical area of Asia. It is upright trunked, used as a traditional medicinal plant. The plant owes its name (Cat’s whiskers) to its four long white to pale purple stamens, which stick out, looking like a cat’s whiskers.
Helleborus orientalis Pretty Ellen White in garden. High quality photo
Evening primrose. Oenothera biennis.
Purple flower . Creative. A beautiful long flower next to which a wasp circles and sits down to collect pollen. High quality 4k footage
Several flowers of the Common Milkpea (Galega officinalis), a species of legume originally of the Middle East but introduced to many regions around the world as a forage and beekeeping crop. It has long been used in herbal medicine and two chemicals contained in its tissues (galegine and guanidine) were instrumental in the formulation of early treatments for diabetes.
A closeup shot of blossom Perforate St John's-wort flowers with blur background
Snapdragon flowers growing beautifully in domestic garden in the UK
White-flowered bells Alba (Campanula)
Swathes of beautiful Bulbinella Hookeri flower in the Cobb Valley, Kahurangi National Park, in New Zealand's South Island. Named after Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker (born 1817), a world famous botanist who travelled on the Antarctic expedition of 1839 under the command of Sir James Ross. Bulbinella is a genus of plant in the family Xanthorrhoeaceae, first described as a genus in 1843. It is also known by the names Golden Wand, Maori Onion, Anthericum Hookeri, Chrysobactron Hookeri.
Latus corniculatus
Leonurus cardiaca has a squarish stem which is clad in short hairs and is often purplish, especially near the nodes. The opposite leaves have serrated margins and are palmately lobed with long petioles; basal leaves are wedge shaped with three points while the upper leaves have three to five. They are slightly hairy above and greyish beneath. Flowers appear in leaf axils on the upper part of the plant and have three-lobed bracts. The calyx of each flower is bell-shaped and has five lobes. The corolla is irregular, 8 to 12 mm long, fused, long-tubed with two lips. The upper lip is convex and covered with white hairs and the lower lip is three-lobed and downward-curving and spotted with red. The flowers are pink to lilac in colour often with furry lower lips. There are four protruding stamens, two short and two longer, and the fruit is a four-chambered schizocarp. The plant grows to about 60 to 100 cm in height and blooms in mid to late summer.\nDistribution and habitat:\nMotherwort is probably native to the southeastern part of Europe and central Asia where it has been cultivated since ancient times. Its natural habitat is beside roadsides, in vacant fields, waste ground, rubbish dumps and other disturbed areas. This plant prefers well drained soil and a partly shady location. Introduced to North America as a bee foraging plant and to attract bumble bees, this perennial herb is now considered invasive. It is hardy in USDA climate zones 4–8 (source Wikipedia). \n\nThis Picture is made during a Vacation in Bulgaria in May 2018.
Free Images: "bestof:Nassarius bifarius 002.jpg en Nassarius bifarius W Baird 1873 a nassa mud snail from the family Nassariidae; Philippines http //www biolib cz/en/image/id116477/"
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Nassarius bifarius 002.jpg
Nassarius bifarius 001.jpg
Nassarius zonalis 002.jpg
Nassarius echinatus 002.jpg
Nassarius pauperus 002.jpg
Nassarius pullus 002.jpg
Nassarius dorri 002.jpg
Nassarius pauperus 001.jpg
Nassarius zonalis 001.jpg
Nassarius echinatus 001.jpg
Nassarius mendicus 002.jpg
Nassarius jacksonianus 002.jpg
Nassarius granum 002.jpg
Nassarius pachychilus 002.jpg
Nassarius hirtus 002.jpg
Nassarius conoidalis 002.jpg
Nassarius pfeifferi 001.jpg
Nassarius mendicus 001.jpg
Nassarius pullus 001.jpg
Nassarius dorri 001.jpg
Nassarius pachychilus 001.jpg
Nassarius hirtus 001.jpg
Nassarius granum 001.jpg
Nassarius jacksonianus 001.jpg
Nassarius granum 003.jpg
Nassarius conoidalis 001.jpg
Nassarius conoidalis 003.jpg
Hebra corticata 002.jpg
Nassarius multipunctatus 002.jpg
Nassarius reeveanus luctuosa 002.jpg
Nassarius candens 002.jpg
Nassarius fuscolineatus 002.jpg
Nassarius semisulcatus 002.jpg
Nassarius splendidulus 002.jpg
Nassarius multipunctatus 001.jpg
Nassarius vinctus 002.jpg
Hebra corticata 001.jpg
Cyllene sulcata 002.jpg
Nassarius reeveanus luctuosa 001.jpg
Nassarius candens 001.jpg
Nassarius camelus 002.jpg
Nassarius clathratus 002.jpg
Nassarius gayii 002.jpg
Nassarius wilsoni 002.jpg
Nassarius fraudulentus 002.jpg
Nassarius subtranslucidus 002.jpg
Nassarius gibbosulus 002.jpg
Nassarius stolatus 002.jpg
Nassarius angulicostis 002.jpg
Nassarius eximius 001.jpg
Nassarius fuscolineatus 001.jpg
Nassarius semisulcatus 001.jpg
Nassarius splendidulus 001.jpg
Nassarius reeveanus velatus 002.jpg
Nassarius burchardi 002.jpg
Nassarius vinctus 001.jpg
Cyllene sulcata 001.jpg
Acteon fabreanus 002.jpg
Naturalis Biodiversity Center - RMNH.MOL.204532 - Nassarius bifarius (Baird, 1873) - Nassariidae - Mollusc shell.jpeg
Nassarius compactus 001.jpg
Nassarius coppingeri 001.jpg
Nassarius fraudulentus 001.jpg
Nassarius camelus 001.jpg
Nassarius clathratus 001.jpg
Nassarius gaudiosus 001.jpg
Nassarius gayii 001.jpg
Nassarius leptospirus 001.jpg
Nassarius muelleri 001.jpg
Nassarius subtranslucidus 001.jpg
Nassarius wilsoni 001.jpg
Nassarius stolatus 001.jpg
Nassarius gibbosulus 001.jpg
Nassarius angulicostis 001.jpg
Nassarius antillarum 001.jpg
Nassarius reeveanus velatus 001.jpg
Nassarius burchardi 001.jpg
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