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Huperzia, fir moss, medicinal plant in a forest
Common Sundew is a low Perennial. Plants usually solitary. Leaves rounded, long-stalked, horizontal or ascending; stalks hairy. Flowers white, 5mm, from the centre of the leaf-rosette, much overtopping the leaves.\nHabitat: Wet heaths, moors and Sphagnum bogs, especially around margins of bog pools, on acid soils.\nFlowering Season: June-August.\nDistribution: Throughout Europe, except Spitsbergen.\n\nThis carnivorous Species is to found in the described Habitats in the Netherlands.
Extreme close up of cypress twigs
Scottish Heathers growing in a domestic garden. Selective focus at f2 on 75mm Leica.
Liverworts, or Hepatics, like miniatyre palm trees
Edelweiss flower
Crisped and twisted leaves of Ulota crispa, a moss in Connecticut, at 20x magnification.
Ferns - which includes both modern ferns and some of the oldest higher plants that appeared about 405 million years ago in the Devonian period of the Paleozoic era.\nAnd if you cook them correctly, they are very tasty.
Moss is a type of non-vascular plant.  They are thallus plants, without roots and true leaves.  Moss usually grows as thin, densely packed leaves of cells, and they like to reproduce and grow in moist environments.  Commonly found in forests, mountains, stones, bark, soil and moist places.  They can survive in lower light conditions and have higher moisture requirements.
Everlastings (Syncarpha vestita). Also called by the following name: Cape snow. Fynbush,  Desert flower in South Africa.
Filipendula vulgaris, commonly known as dropwort or fern-leaf dropwort. Isolated on white.
Wild Begonia potted plant with variegated bumby leafs. Blooming pink flower head.
Acaena buchananii or Magnoliopsida silver green plants with red brown stem, top view. Natural background
Wild blueberries ready to be picked
Boerhavia erecta or erect spiderling, is used in traditional medicine and as a food.
The new scientific name is now Draba verna.\nVery variable, low, slightly hairy annual, sometimes overwintering; stems leafless. Leaves lanceolate to elliptical, toothed, in a basal rosette.\nFlowers white or pinkish, 3-5mm, the petals deeply cleft.\nFruit narrow-elliptical, 6-10mm, hairless, on long stalks.\nHabitat: Dry rocks, walls, sandy and stony ground, dry sandy heaths, both coastal and inland, to 1700m.\nFlowering Season: March-May.\nDistribution: Throughout /Europe, except the Arctic and the Faeroes.\n\nThis is a very common Species for the described Habitats in the Netherlands, also in a more Urban Environment.
Anthriscus sylvestris, known as cow parsley, wild chervil, wild beaked parsley, keck, or Queen Anne's lace, is a herbaceous biennial or short-lived perennial plant.
Everlastings (Syncarpha vestita). Also called by the following name: Cape snow. Fynbush,  Desert flower in South Africa.
flowers
Angelica archangelica plant in an early summer English garden border
A detailed image of a seaweed plant with branching green and brown tendrils, isolated on a white background.
Human hand holding willow flowers. Shot on film
Anemone coronaria, poppy anemone or Spanish marigold, is a herbaceous perennial tuberous plant and used in traditional medicine.
Deschampsia flexuosa, commonly known as wavy hair-grass, is a species of bunchgrass in the grass family widely distributed in Eurasia, Africa, South America, and North America.\nDescription:\nWavy hair-grass, Deschampsia flexuosa, has wiry leaves and delicate, shaking panicles formed of silvery or purplish-brown flower heads on wavy, hair-like stalks. The leaves are bunched in tight tufts with plants forming a very tussocky, low sward 5 to 20 cm tall before flowering, to 30 cm high.\nDistribution and habitat:\nDeschampsia flexuosa is found naturally in dry grasslands and on moors and heaths. \nIt is also an important component of the ground flora of birch and oak woodland. \nThe plant has a preference for acidic, free-draining soil, and avoids chalk and limestone areas. It can exist over 1,200 meters above sea level (source Wikipedia).\n\nThis is a common Grass Species on the described Habitats in the Netherlands.
Pteris vittata or Pteris vittata L or fern , fern plant in the garden
Indian pipe (Monotropa uniflora) flower heads from above. A wildflower not a mushroom, in the New England forest in midsummer. With one flower on each stem, this is one of the few plants that lack chlorophyll (which makes plants green). It can live in dark forests because it needs no sunlight for photosynthesis. It survives by parasitizing certain fungi, trees and decomposing plants. Also called ghost plant.
Macro view of moss capsules in the morning sunlight.
Untouched nature. When a small piece of cultivated land is left alone for a year during the summer, a remarkable transformation takes place. wildflowers begins to emerge, painting the landscape with vibrant hues. Native plants reclaim their territory and bring biodiversity back to the area. Buried seeds from seasons past awaken, shooting up.
Cotinus coggygria inflorescence
Lush and rocky arctic landscape at Hvalsey Fjord outside Qaqortoq - Julianehåb in south west Greenland on a sunny summer day
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