crown anemone

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Crown Anemone Royalty Free Stock Photo
The Crown Anemone Royalty Free Stock Photo
Red Crown Anemone and Wild Grass in the Negev Royalty Free Stock Photo
Macro of a Red Crown Anemone Flower Royalty Free Stock Photo
Crown anemone Animo Blue Royalty Free Stock Photo
Crown anemone Animo Blue Royalty Free Stock Photo
Beautiful blue Crown Anemone flowers in the park Royalty Free Stock Photo
Crown Anemone
Crown Anemone Royalty Free Stock Photo
Crown Anemone Royalty Free Stock Photo
Crown anemone Animo Pink Royalty Free Stock Photo
The Crown Anemone Royalty Free Stock Photo
Crown anemone Animo Pink Royalty Free Stock Photo
A dark blue crown anemone with a bud in spring . Royalty Free Stock Photo
Crown Anemone Royalty Free Stock Photo
Anemone Coronaria (Crown Anemone) This is one of the most memorable and beautiful Mediterranean plants because of its brightly-coloured flowers, which are among the first to appear in the early spring (although exceptionally bad storms of rain or hail and cold winds have been known to the flowering time until the sun encourages them to appear). Flower stems 10-30 cm high, bearing a solitary flower head, leaf-like twice cut into narrow segments. Flowers large, 4-8 cms across, without green sepals, which distingguishes it clearly from the Asiatic Buttercup; 5-8 oval petals, in many different flower colours of lavender, lilac, deep purple, red to scarlet, rose-pink, magneta, and more rarely white, blue or in many and various intermediate shades, sometimes two-coloured, with a white or pale base; even the white have a circle of white in the area near the stamens (the white petals make this circle more difficult to see, but caught in the sun at certain angle the white circle shines silvery-white or white). The red form and the shades of purple are the most widespread, but it is very exciting to find the rarer pale apricot pink and the deep salmon pink. Fruiting heads become taller and more cylindirical as the petals fade. Stamens numerous; filaments pink, violet or red; anthers purplish or black; styles threadlike 1-2 mm long, blackish. Torus ovoid; nutlets densely woolly. Leaves broadly triangular, 3-12 cm across, divided into 3 triangular, stalked, pinnatifid or deeply divided segments, ultimate divisions narrow, variously toothed; stalks 3-7 cm long.


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