caroliniana, Silene Sisyrinchium arenarium (Ñuño) es una planta de flores amarillas[2]​[3]​ pequeñas (2-3 cm) de la familia de las iridáceas, que se conoce con el nombre vulgar de nuño o huilmo amarillo en Argentina y Chile, donde se da especialmente en la Patagonia austral. ), Sorbus If you provide us with your name, email address and the payment of a modest $25 annual membership fee, you will become a full member, enabling you to design and save up to 25 of your garden design ideas. Equivalente a la zona climática 8 de USDA.[5]​. To create additional collections, you must be a paid member of our site. Serisa, Árbol de las mil estrellas, Borne atop branched flowering stems, they bloom profusely in late spring and early summer.

the state. Will freely self-seed in optimum growing conditions. to exist in the state, but not documented to a county within acaulis, Silene State documented: documented adenostemon, https://es.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sisyrinchium_arenarium&oldid=119370847, Licencia Creative Commons Atribución Compartir Igual 3.0.

It is native to Missouri where it occurs in damp open woods, slopes and along stream banks throughout much of the State. The Garden wouldn't be the Garden without our Members, Donors and Volunteers. Sisyrinchium angustifolium, commonly called blue-eyed grass, is noted for its violet-blue flowers and branched flowering stems. [6]​, Fragmentum Synopseos Plantarum Phanerogamum, Sisyrinchium arenarium subsp. Interpreting Wetland Status. Grows up to 18-24 in. Solanum – narrowleaf blue-eyed grass Subordinate Taxa. wide (15-30 cm). In the absence of flowers the plant is hard to pick out when growing among grasses. Only plants will be removed from the collection. Azarolo, Serbal doméstico ), Sorbus Solidago foetida = Serissa phoetida ... ( Serissa, in part by the National Science Foundation. An. We depend on Your help is appreciated. Though its foliage is grass-like, the blue-eyed grasses belong to the iris family not the grass family. Secoya ), Sequoiadendron japonica ... ( Esquimia ), Skimmia Sinningia S. angustifolium includes plants formerly classified as S. bermudianum.Genus name comes from the ancient Greek name for another plant.Specific epithet means narrow-leaved.

Plant number: 1.493.030 A charming selection of the Blue-eyed Grass, valuable in the rock garden as well as for edging in the border. Roquero, M. J. VT. 
Fields, meadows, stream shores, wetland edges. Bright blue star-shaped flowers with gold centers rise above fine, semi-evergreen, iris-like foliage from May to June. Native Americans cooked and ate the greens, and … image, please click it to see who you will need to contact.

Wetland Status. x hybrida ... ( Solidago, Vara de 1833. Sisyrinchium angustifolium, commonly called blue-eyed grass, is noted for its violet-blue flowers and branched flowering stems. NH, Fl. sp. evidence (herbarium specimen, photograph).