|
''Lupinus bicolor'' is a species of lupine known as the miniature lupine, Lindley's annual lupine, or bicolor lupine. 〔(Jepson: ''Lupinus bicolor'' )〕 It is a showy flowering annual or perennial plant native to western North America, from northwestern Baja California, throughout California, and north to British Columbia. It is is found in diverse habitats below , including: grasslands; chaparral; oak, mixed conifer and Joshua tree woodlands; coastal sage scrub; and open conifer forests. 〔 It often shares habitats with other prolifically blooming spring and early summer wildflowers, including the California poppy. 〔(Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center, NPIN−Native Plant Information Network: ''Lupinus bicolor'' )〕 ==Description== ''Lupinus bicolor'' has a short, hairy stem and thin, palmately-arranged leaves. The inflorescence is short for a lupine, at up to tall. As its name suggests the flowers are usually two colors, with one often a deep blue. The other color is often white and sometimes a light purple or magenta. There are sometimes small speckles or spots on the petals. The plant's hairy pods are quite small, only a couple of centimeters long and very thin, and they contain tiny brownish peas. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Lupinus bicolor」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|