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3D rendering of a pink blooming sakura tree isolated on white background
Galanthus nivalis was described by the Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus in his Species Plantarum in 1753, and given the specific epithet nivalis, meaning snowy (Galanthus means with milk-white flowers).
Ginkgo tree with yellow leaves
Deer jumping fence. Deer herd of stags, doe and fawn in autumn colors
3d render Ivy on a white background
Young beautiful tree isolated on white background. 3d illustration
Low to medium, rather variable, rhizomatous, hairless perennial with fans of fleshy, sword-shaped leaves, basal often orange-tinged; stem leaves small and bract-like, the upper larger than the lower. Flowers greenish-yellow or orange-yellow, 10-16mmstarry, in a rather lax spike like raceme; filaments of stamens densely hairy. Fruit a small narrow, elliptical capsule, to 12mm long.\nHabitat: Bogs and wet acid heaths and moors, to 1200m.\nFlowering Season: July-September.\nDistribution: Throughout Europe, except the far north.\nGenerally regarded as poisonous, especially to livestock.\n\nThis Picture is made during a Vacation to Ireland in July 2022.
views around the Spiral Tunnels Yoho National Park British Columbia Canada
Bergenia crassifolia, also called Korean elephant-ear. The plant was belived to be a saxifrage.
Sacred bamboo’s bloom (nandina domestica) in the park , Hong Kong
Branches on a tall Spruce tree in a forest. Taken on a mobile device.
Tree that are isolated on a white background are suitable for both printing and web pages
Side view of a red deer hind (Cervus elaphus) walking in quiet morning sunshine. She is walking away from a harem group where the possessive male seems to have entirely missed her walking away. Stags are usually very active in trying to prevent a female from leaving a harem.
heimische Orchidee in den Bayerischen Alpen
Short perennial, the stem with several brown sheaths at the base. Leaves oblong, keeled, shiny-green, the upper leaves smaller and bract-like. Bracts membranous, shorter than the ovary. Flowers greenish-yellow, often with reddish margins and streaks, borne in a slender spike, often many-flowered, each flower manikin-like, with the sepals and petals forming a close hood; lip 12-15mm, pendent, the lateral lobes forming short, narrow ‘arms’ and the central lobe divided into narrow legs; spurless.\nHabitat: Grassland, field boundaries, abandoned quarries, banks and open scrub, rarely along woodland margins, on calcareous soils, to 1500m.\nFlowering Season: May-June.\nDistribution: S & SE Britain, Belgium, Holland, France and Germany.\n\nThis Picture is made during a long weekend in the Eifel (Germany) in June 2019.
Collection of trees isolated on white background, A beautiful trees from Thailand.
Resting fallow deer in the Water win area of Amsterdam, \
A closeup of white Agapanthus orientalis, lily of the Nile.
Amphilophus Labiatus red devil and Astronotus ocellatus
Beauty Hawthorn tree in the park
Catfish
Female of rare endemic Menelik bushbuck (Tragelaphus scriptus meneliki) hiding in bush, antelope in Simien mountains, Ethiopia, Africa wilderness
Wild large mule deer
Pink Ammania plant, Ammannia gracilis, with blossoms.
Two Deer Grazing on Slopped Pasture with Mountains.
Sea lily in Castellon.
Scotch broom is a pretty, yellow wildflower similar to gorse. Here it is planted deliberately as part of an urban floral garden display. We think of a broom as a brush or besom, but in Scotland, a brush called a sguab could be made from Scotch broom bound with wire and fitted to a birch handle. Broom is a toxic plant. A Scottish farm lady named Maggy Johnston was famed for her intoxicating brew: Some said it was the pith of Broom, That she stow'd in her masking-loom, Which in our heads rais'd sic a foom; Or some wild seed, Which aft the chaping stoup did toom, But fill'd our head. (From (Elegy on Maggy Johnston), who died in 1711.).
Green and orange grass and weeds. Flat lay.
Jasmine flower
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