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Arum maculatum  is a woodland flowering plant species in the family Araceae. The image shows several plants with its poisonous berries.
Conium maculatum, colloquially known as hemlock, poison hemlock or wild hemlock, is a highly poisonous biennial herbaceous flowering plant in the carrot family Apiaceae.
Arum maculatum  is a woodland flowering plant species in the family Araceae. The image shows several plants with its poisonous berries.
Joe Pye weed flowers with butterfly and bee
Eutrochium maculatum (Spotted Joe-pye Weed) Native North American Wetland Wildflower
Eutrochium maculatum (Spotted Joe-pye Weed) Native North American Wetland Wildflower
Bright red berries of the Cuckoo Pint (Arum maculatum)
Footage of Spotted dead-nettle (Lamium maculatum) flowers growing by the wall in the backyard.\nShot with Canon R5
Eutrochium maculatum (Spotted Joe-pye Weed) Native North American Wetland Wildflower
Arum maculatum
Eutrochium maculatum (Spotted Joe-pye Weed) Native North American Wetland Wildflower
Latraea squamaris or common toothwort flowers and Arum maculatum or jack-in-the-pulpit leaves
Wild geranium (Geranium maculatum) in bloom. Taken in spring while fly fishing in West Virginia.
Eutrochium maculatum (spotted joe-pyeweed is a North American species of flowering plants in the sunflower family. It is widespread through much of the United States and Canada. It is the only species of the genus found west of the Great Plains.\n Eutrochium maculatum is an herbaceous perennial sometimes growing as high as 2 m. Stems are sometimes completely purple, sometimes green with purple spots. One plant can produce numerous rose-purple flower heads in late summer, each head with 8-22 disc flowers but no ray flowers.  The binomial name maculatum, meaning spotted, refers to the purple spots on the stem.\nSpotted Joe-Pye weed thrives in marshes, rich fens and swamps. It also does well in man-made moist expanses such as ditches, seepage areas and wet fields. Above all else the plant flourishes in the non-shaded environments that are also abundant in wetlands (source Wikipedia). \n\nThis Picture is made in an Ornamental Garden in the Netherlands.
flowering plant known as spotted dead-nettle spotted henbit and purple dragon
Eutrochium maculatum (Spotted Joe-pye Weed) Native North American Wetland Wildflower
Small white inflorescence of this famous highly poisonous plant
Meadow green grass and flowers of Lamium maculatum plant
set of blossoms of the lamium maculatum or spotted dead-nettle
Zygopetalum maculatum, Spotted Zygopetalum from Brazil and Peru
Short perennial with a horizontal tuber, often patch-forming. Leaves appearing in the spring, blunt arrow-shaped, shiny bright green, often with small black blotches. Spathes flushed, spotted and streaked with purple, rarely entirely yellowish.\nFruiting spike relative small, 3-4cm, berries bright orange-red.\nHabitat: Woodland, hedgerows, ditch-banks.\nFlowering Season: April-May.\nDistribution: Britain, to Holland and Germany southwards; naturalized in Holland.\n\nThe Picture is made along a small River in the Eifel (Germany) in halfway August 2021.
Close-Up of Arum Maculatum with Bright Red Berries and Negative Space in the Background
Pink flowers of spotted dead-nettle Lamium maculatum. Medicinal plants in the garden. Lamium maculatum. Purple flowers dragon dead nettle.
Wild arum ((Arum maculatum)) is a common woodland plant, often picked out from darkness by single shafts of sunlight. Other names for wild arum in the UK are Lords and Ladies, Jack in the pulpit, cuckoo-pint, cuckoo flower and starchwort; while in America names such as wake Robin, dragon root and wild turnip are used. In John Gerard's Herball (1597), he writes: 'The most pure and white starch is made of the rootes of the Cuckoo-pint, but most hurtful for the hands of the laundresse that have the handling of it, for it chappeth, blistereth, and maketh the hands rough and rugged and withall smarting.' Wild arum is at its most poisonous at the time of the cuckoo, in early spring. Shown here are the poisonous orange berries, in late summer.
Poisonous berries Arum maculatum. Arum flowers family.
Poison hemlock leaf Conium maculatum up close macro carrot family apiaceae.
Wildflower- Wild Geranium (Geranium maculatum)
Close-Up of Toxic Red Berries on Arum maculatum in Woodland Setting
Arum maculatum, commonly known as cuckoopint, jack-in-the-pulpit leafs with white markings on them
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