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The females lay their eggs between the wood spurge thorns.
Wood spurge also doing better.
Wood spurge, E. amygdaloides var.
Along the ride edges grow cowslip, cuckoo flower, greater stitchwort, wood spurge, wood violet, bugle, yellow archangel and wild strawberry.
Alastair's great-grandmother Mary-Anne was a plant hunter, with the Wood Spurge Euphorbia amygdaloides 'var.
Great Gannick is rich in plant species with 74 species recorded by Lousley including butcher's-broom, wood spurge, wood small-reed and white ramping-fumitory.
The only flower which P. coriacea has been recorded feeding on is wood spurge, but it may visit a wide range of flowers, so long as they have short corollas.
Euphorbia amygdaloides (wood spurge) is a species of flowering plant in the family Euphorbiaceae, native to woodland locations in Europe, Turkey and the Caucasus.
Being adjacent to woodland, plants of the woodland varieties grow along the fields edges, such as Barren Strawberry, Wood Spurge and Wood Avens, with various ferns.
The Common is noted for its wild flowers, with thriving communities of Yellow Archangel Galeobdolon luteum, Wood Spurge Euphorbia amygdaloides and Wood Anemone Anemone nemorosa.
Priocnemis perturbator, which is reasonably common and has long antennae, can often be seen nectaring on Wood Spurge Euphorbia amygladoides but it has also been seen nectaring on dandelion, blackthorn, hawthorn and willow.
The northern areas are slowly returning to native oaks with a hornbeam and hawthorn understory, and a woodland ground flora that includes Wood False Brome grass and Wood Spurge; the whole being interspersed with naturalising exotic thorns and service trees to add a cross-cultural dimension.
Euphorbia amygdaloides (wood spurge) is a species of flowering plant in the family Euphorbiaceae, native to woodland locations in Europe, Turkey and the Caucasus.
The Common is noted for its wild flowers, with thriving communities of Yellow Archangel Galeobdolon luteum, Wood Spurge Euphorbia amygdaloides and Wood Anemone Anemone nemorosa.