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Typha herbaceous plant. Green reeds in the swamp
Golden ears spikes of wheat cereal in summer ripe to be harvested
green field with ears of rice close-up
De dwergzegge (Carex oederi subsp. oederi, synoniemen: Carex serotina, Carex viridula subsp. viridula, Carex scandinavica) is een overblijvend kruid dat behoort tot de cypergrassenfamilie (Cyperaceae) en wordt vaak verward met de geelgroene zegge. De soort staat op de Nederlandse Rode lijst van planten als algemeen voorkomend en stabiel of toegenomen. De plant komt van nature voor in Europa en Noord-Amerika. \nDe plant wordt 5-30 cm hoog en vormt dichte polletjes. De stengels zijn rechtopstaand, glad en stomp driekantig. De gootvormige bladeren zijn 1-2 mm breed. De onderste bladscheden zijn strokleurig, lichtbeige of wit. \nHabitat: Dwergzegge komt voor op natte, zoete tot brakke, matig voedselrijke grond vooral in duinvalleien en op groene stranden. \nFlowering Season: De hoofdbloei van de dwergzegge valt in mei, juni en juli. In augustus, september en oktober komen ook bloeiende planten voor.\nDistribution: De plant komt van nature voor in Europa en Noord-Amerika (source Wikipedia).
man collects horsetail for medicinal use. Equisetum arvense harvested for home remedies.
Cattail reeds background
macro shoot of green grass
Close up of ripe wheat grain in hand - plant growing on the field against sky
Bunch of wild asparagus in the hand, picked up in the forest during springtime in Dalmatia
Cereals
Green spikelet wheat against the blue sky and green fields of wheat in hand
This is a rice field after a flood in a rural area of ​​Xishuangbanna, Yunnan. The traces of water flow are clearly visible, and some areas are still covered by water. The fields have not yet recovered and are muddy and wet. The mountains and fields in the distance complement each other, depicting the direct impact of floods on agricultural ecosystems and reflecting the complex relationship between farmland and the natural environment.
Plants growing in the garden in the Netherlands
Ripe wheat field
fresh wet green grass roots detailed background
Low biennial or perennial, sometimes annual, with a solitary or several rosettes. Leaves linear to lanceolate, often pinnately-lobed, toothed, hairless or finely hairy. Flowers yellowish-brown, 3mm, in long spikes on enridged stalks longer than the leaves; anthers pale yellow.\nHabitat: Coastal places, sandy or gravelly soils, occasionally inland.\nFlower Season: May-July.\nDistribution: Throughout, except the far North.
Millet plantations in the field. close up field of sorghum or millet. field of sweet dorghum stalk and seeds. millet field.
Photo of sugar cane plantation
Powdery mildew (Erysiphe, Blumeria graminis f.sp. tritici) infection on a wheat, cereal crop fungi.
Sweetcorn growing in the vegetable garden.
A background of green young reeds on a dried swamp. Young green reeds are small in summer during drought.
Hand holding a handfull of oats.
Nice plant on the ground in a public park in Portugal
barleycorn
Fresh green plants grow in the fertile soil of a rural agricultural field in spring.
Fresh Cut Rice Grain Organic Stalks Chiang Mai, Thailand
Check the harvest of barley. Barley. Angiosperm plant. Grain used for feed and the production of beer and malt.
Common sorghum
close-up to dinkel wheat in field
Echinochloa crus-galli is a type of wild grass originating from tropical Asia that was formerly classified as a type of panicum grass. It is commonly known as cockspur (or cockspur grass), barnyard millet, Japanese millet, water grass, common barnyard grass, or simply \
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