photo: Public Domain / Mihai Dumitru
Garden strawberry.
photo: Creative Commons / Felagund
Bassia
photo: Creative Commons / Bff
Alisma
photo: Creative Commons / Jeffdelonge
Kerria (plant)
photo: Creative Commons / Wingchi
Gaillardia pulchella
photo: Creative Commons / Stan Shebs
Encelia virginensis
photo: Public Domain / Stickpen
Machaeranthera tanacetifolia
photo: Creative Commons / Wsiegmund
Anemone oregana
photo: Creative Commons / Stan Shebs
Chaenactis macrantha
photo: Creative Commons / JW Stockert
Clematis hirsutissima
photo: Creative Commons / Stan Shebs
Purshia
photo: Public Domain / Stan Shebs
Machaeranthera canescens
photo: Creative Commons / JW Stockert
Pyrrocoma uniflora
photo: Creative Commons / Stan Shebs
Machaeranthera arida
photo: Creative Commons / BerndH
Nuphar lutea, the spatterdock, yellow water-lily, cow lily, or yellow pond-lily, is an aquatic plant of the family Nymphaeaceae, native to Eurasia. It grows in eutrophic freshwater beds, with its roots fixed into the ground and its leaves floating on the water's surface.
photo: Creative Commons / joedecruyenaere
Lessingia lemmonii
photo: Creative Commons / David.Monniaux
Artemisia absinthium
photo: Creative Commons / Jugni
Ready to eat Strawberries
photo: Creative Commons / Eddideigel
Artemisia absinthium (Absinthe Wormwood) shoots
photo: Creative Commons / TeunSpaans
Calendula officinalis (Pot Marigold) is a plant in the genus Calendula (marigolds), in the family Asteraceae. It is probably native to southern Europe though its long history of cultivation makes its precise origin unknown, and may possibly be of garden origin. It is also widely naturalised further north in Europe (north to southern England) and elsewhere in warm temperate regions of the world.[1][2][3]
photo: Creative Commons
Dandelion seeds (achenes) can be carried long distances by the wind.
photo: Creative Commons
Legume of Vicia angustifolia
photo: Creative Commons
Diagram of the internal structure of a dicot seed and embryo. (a) seed coat, (b) endosperm, (c) cotyledon, (d) hypocotyl.