Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Adults have been observed to visit the flowers of wild parsnip.
The wild parsnip is also indigenous to the plains on the mountains.
Wild parsnip is a common name for several plants and may refer to:
Up to 20% of the fruits of wild parsnip are parthenocarpic.
Wild parsnip is most irritating while flowering.
Certainty: good, but resembles wild carrot & wild parsnip.
In New Zealand, it is also sometimes called wild parsnip, or wild rhubarb.
They feed on wild parsnip.
Five foot high stalks of wild parsnip and thistles have discouraged the winter fun-seekers from destroying the lot.
The boys' sister, Candace, tries to expose the cirque to her mother while experiencing an allergic reaction to wild parsnips.
Wild parsnip originated in Europe where its roots were eaten, according to Iowa State University.
It remains uncertain what exactly those animals and plants might have been, although edible roots in the area included wild carrots and wild parsnips.
County countryside officer Simeon Jones said wild parsnip grew extensively on the coast and elsewhere in the county.
A. The flowers might belong to any of several common weeds, but wide leaves make me fear your plant could be wild parsnip, Pastinaca sativa.
Brushing against unbroken plants is safe, and washing up promptly can forestall problems, so wild parsnip's mean side is seldom obvious.
The seedless wild parsnip fruit are preferred by certain herbivores, and thus serve as a "decoy defense" against seed predation.
Potentially poisonous plants, outside of the home, to be especialla aware of are mushrooms and Cicuta which is mistaken for wild parsnips.
Oak Valley is thriving if one is to judge by the wild parsnip which is only 36" tall due to the dryness this year.
In many parts of North America, carrots and wild parsnips that grow abundantly along fields and roads could probably be used in the same way.
Wild parsnip is 80 cm high with thick perennial rootstock and is sparsely hairy to almost hairless.
This class of phytochemical is responsible for the phytophotodermatitis seen in exposure to the juices of the wild parsnip and the giant hogweed.
Like coyote tobacco, wild parsnips when they are losing leaves can tell whether it is from animals munching or just the battering of wind or rain.
After the wild parsnips and leeks have all been eaten, people in Hazarajat eat rhubarb and wild clover.
The adult wasps feed on the nectar of Umbellifers such as wild carrot, wild parsnip and rock samphire.
Despite the slight morphological differences between the two, wild parsnip is the same taxon as the cultivated version, and the two will readily cross-pollinate.