Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Homogyne alpina

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Kingdom
  
Tribe
  
Senecioneae

Scientific name
  
Homogyne alpina

Rank
  
Species

Order
  
Genus
  
Homogyne

Higher classification
  
Daisy family

Homogyne alpina FileHomogyne alpina 1jpg Wikimedia Commons

Similar
  
Homogyne, Daisy family, Calamagrostis villosa, Adenostyles alliariae, Adenostyles

Homogyne alpina, Alpine coltsfoot or purple colt's-foot, is a rhizomatous herb in the Asteraceae family, which is often used as an ornamental plant. In addition, this plant has purple-red flowers, and it is usually associated with the gall flies Ensina sonchi and Acidia cognata.

Contents

Homogyne alpina FileHomogyne alpina Sturm51jpg Wikimedia Commons

Homogyne alpina is a perennial plant that reaches a height of 10 to 40 centimeters. The rhizome is creeping woolly and scaly. The stem is erect, reddish brown and often single head. It is hairy silvery-woolly, bare later and usually has 2 leaves on small scales. The leaves are basal, long-stalked, leathery, coarse and glossy dark green, the underside is lighter. The leaf blade is heart-kidney-shaped.

Homogyne alpina Homogyne alpina Wikipedia

The baskets have a diameter up to 25 mm. The bracts are single row, crowded and hairy brown-red woolly at the base. The flowers are reddish and longer than the basket case, the corners are purple. The fruits have a long hair crown.

Homogyne alpina Homogyne alpina Tossillagine alpina

Flowering time is from May to August.

Occurrence

Homogyne alpina httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Homogyne alpina comes in the mountains of South Central Europe at altitudes from 500 to 3 000 meters. The species grows on moist, humus-rich, mossy soil in coniferous forests, bushes and dwarf-shrub heath. It is common.

Similar Species

The felt-like Homogyne discolor is characterized by the under side white, felty leaves.

Homogyne alpina Homogyne alpina Hortipedia

Homogyne alpina FileHomogyne alpina a4jpg Wikimedia Commons

Homogyne alpina FileHomogyne alpina ENBLA05jpg Wikimedia Commons

References

Homogyne alpina Wikipedia