RM2C9MDA9–Sedum ternatum, Wild stonecrop, July, Cornwall, UK
RM2HB32K3–Botrychium dissectum Tarawera and Botrychium ternatum Orakei. From the album: New Zealand ferns. 167 varieties, Eric Craig, maker/artist, 1888, Auckland, blueprint process
RF2HK6N4G–Inspired by Botrychium dissectum Tarawera and Botrychium ternatum Orakei. From the album: New Zealand ferns. 167 varieties, Eric Craig, maker/artist, 1888, Auckland, blueprint process, Reimagined by Artotop. Classic art reinvented with a modern twist. Design of warm cheerful glowing of brightness and light ray radiance. Photography inspired by surrealism and futurism, embracing dynamic energy of modern technology, movement, speed and revolutionize culture
RM2CBGABC–WILD STONECROP (SEDUM TERNATUM) in bloom
RM2AN0F5M–SEDUM TERNATUM
RM2BT57WT–Carolinian claytonia, Claytonia caroliniana, Virginian claytonia, Claytonia virginica, houseleek-like stonecrop, Sedum semper-vivoides, ternate-leaved stonecrop, Sedum ternatum, and blue-flowered stonecrop, Sedum caeruleum. Handfinished chromolithograph by Henry Noel Humphreys after an illustration by Jane Loudon from Mrs. Jane Loudon's Ladies Flower Garden of Ornamental Perennials, William S. Orr, London, 1849.
RM2AN0BFP–SEDUM TERNATUM
RMBJT074–Five varieties of moonwort fern (Botrychium simplex, B. virginicum, B. rutaefolium, B. ternatum and B. lunaria).
RMJ4B7M7–Pelargonium ternatum B544
RMM4XRGK–Carolinian claytonia, Claytonia caroliniana, Virginian claytonia, Claytonia virginica, houseleek-like stonecrop, Sedum semper-vivoides, ternate-leaved stonecrop, Sedum ternatum, and blue-flowered stonecrop, Sedum caeruleum. Handfinished chromolithograph by Henry Noel Humphreys after an illustration by Jane Loudon from Mrs. Jane Loudon's Ladies Flower Garden of Ornamental Perennials, William S. Orr, London, 1849.
RMPC2M5D–475 Pelargonium ternatum B544
RMHKD8B3–Pelargonium ternatum B544
RF2BNEK8R–Wild stonecrop (Sedum ternatum), a native plant of eastern North America, growing in rock garden in central Virginia.
RM2ETA51R–Pelargonium ternatum B544.
RMW326H2–Sedum ternatum BB-1913
RM2JRC4XA–Botrychium ternatum, Orakei. From the album: New Zealand ferns,148 varieties, 1880, Auckland, by Herbert Dobbie.
RFT5RXR4–A picture shows the Flower of Sedum Ternatum Plant. It has white, star-like Flower and it is also called as stonecrop. It has multiple filaments and o
RM2JRN77C–Botrychium dissectum Tarawera and Botrychium ternatum Orakei. From the album: New Zealand ferns. 167 varieties, 1888, Auckland, by Eric Craig, Herbert Dobbie.
RFT60MED–A picture shows Sedum Ternatum Flowering Plant. It is also called as woodland stonecrop and belongs to sedum. Its flowers are white star shaped, vinta
RFA1RKNE–Stonecrop (Sedum ternatum)
RF2HKN3AD–Art inspired by Botrychium dissectum Tarawera and Botrychium ternatum Orakei. From the album: New Zealand ferns. 167 varieties, Eric Craig, maker/artist, 1888, Auckland, blueprint process, Classic works modernized by Artotop with a splash of modernity. Shapes, color and value, eye-catching visual impact on art. Emotions through freedom of artworks in a contemporary way. A timeless message pursuing a wildly creative new direction. Artists turning to the digital medium and creating the Artotop NFT
RM2CBGA77–WILD STONECROP (SEDUM TERNATUM) in bloom
RFT5RYKA–A picture describing the various parts of Sedum Ternatum such as a sepal, a petal, a stamen and a pistil, vintage line drawing or engraving illustrati
RF2RDX01X–Sedum Ternatum the Three Leaved Stonecrop succulent in a wooden flower box
RM2WTK2NM–Botrychium ternatum, Orakei. From the album: New Zealand ferns. 148 varieties cyanotypes, photographic prints
RFT5X600–Wild Stonecrop (Sedum Ternatum)- Good for border or groundcover where short evergreen species are needed, vintage line drawing or engraving illustrati
RMJ96R59–Pelargonium ternatum B544
RM2WTK1Y9–Botrychium ternatum, Kohimarama. From the album: New Zealand ferns. 172 varieties cyanotypes, photographic prints
RMMWMJJH–. English: Pelargonium ternatum . 29 October 2011. Nicolao Josepho Jacquin 475 Pelargonium ternatum B544
RMHX6N7P–Pelargonium ternatum B544
RF2K36EXW–A closeup shot of a woodland stonecrop (Sedum ternatum)
RM2AFJAC6–. The structure and development of mosses and ferns (Archegoniatae). hat of the trueFerns. In B. lunaria the bundle has the phloem only perfectlydeveloped on its outer side and approaches the collateral form.B. ternatum and B. lunaria, while having concentric bundles,also have the phloem more strongly developed on the outer side.The tracheary tissue is much like that of the stem, but thetracheids are smaller and the walls thinner. The smaller tra-cheids show reticulate markings. VII PTERIDOPHYTA—FIUCINEAI—OPHIOGLOSSACEJE 265 The phloem is composed also of the same elements, largesieve-tubes, a
RMBNC6MK–Botanical print from Manual of Botany of the Northern United States, Asa Gray, 1889. Plate XX, Genera of Filices.
RFC6MEM6–Elephant Ear or Heart of Jesus or Angel Wings or Caladium sp., vintage engraving. Old engraved illustration of an Elephant
RF2JBG7AA–Angel‘s Wing (Caladium lindenii) leaves
RFEWA0E4–Elephant Ear or Heart of Jesus or Angel Wings or Caladium sp., vintage engraving. Old engraved illustration of an Elephant Ear plant.
RF2RC40G4–Angel‘s Wing (Caladium lindenii) leaves
RMA68M27–Stonecrop Wildflower
RM2CBGA4B–WILD STONECROP (SEDUM TERNATUM) in bloom
RMRX8A2R–An illustrated flora of the An illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the British possessions : from Newfoundland to the parallel of the southern boundary of Virginia and from the Atlantic Ocean westward to the 102nd meridian ed2illustratedflo02brit Year: 1913 CRASSULACEAE. 8. Sedum ternatum Michx. Wild Stonecrop. Fig. 2141. i'. icrnalum Michx. Fl. Bor. Am. i ; 277. 1803. Perennial by rootstocks, tufted, stem creep- ing, flowering branches ascending, 3'-8' high. Lower leaves and those of the sterile shoots flat, obovate, entire, 6'-i2' long, sometimes 9' wide, rounded at
RF2RDX2GJ–Succulent Sedum Ternatum the Three Leaved Stonecrop blooming in a wooden flower box
RM2WTKFK9–Botrychium Ternatum, Orakei. From the album: New Zealand ferns. 148 varieties cyanotypes, photographic prints
RMMYN9R1–. English: Pelargonium ternatum . 29 October 2011. Nicolao Josepho Jacquin 415 Pelargonium ternatum B544
RMPFMFNH–. Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising suggestions for cultivation of horticultural plants, descriptions of the species of fruits, vegetables, flowers, and ornamental plants sold in the United States and Canada, together with geographical and biographical sketches. Gardening. 2284. Sedum ternatum tA i-r;). are about 1}.^ in. long and recurved; anthers brownish purple. July. Mts. of Va. and Ala. —Hardy in Mass. and desirable for edgings or rockeries, according to Ed- ward Gillett. 15. populi!61ium, Pall. A very distinct species by rea- son of its shrubby base, stalked, poplar-shaped
RM2AX40MN–The elements of botany for beginners and for schools . regular, and symmetrical blossom, and one as simple as such a blossomcould well be. Flowers are said to be Perfect (hermaphrodite), wlien provided with both kinds of essential or-gans, i. e. with both stamens and pistils. Complete, when, besides, they have the two sets of floral envelopes, namely, Fig. 221. Model of a simple pistil, with ovary cut across and slightly openedventrally, to show the ovules and their attacliment. Pro. 222. Flower of Sedum ternatum, a Stonecrop. FiQ. 223. Parts of same, two of each kind, .separated and displayed
RM2CBGABW–WILD STONECROP (SEDUM TERNATUM) in bloom
RMT03FP1–An illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the British possessions : from Newfoundland to the parallel of the southern boundary of Virginia and from the Atlantic Ocean westward to the 102nd meridian . ed2illustratedflo02brit Year: 1913 CRASSULACEAE. 8. Sedum ternatum Michx. Wild Stonecrop. Fig. 2141. i'. icrnalum Michx. Fl. Bor. Am. i ; 277. 1803. Perennial by rootstocks, tufted, stem creep- ing, flowering branches ascending, 3'-8' high. Lower leaves and those of the sterile shoots flat, obovate, entire, 6'-i2' long, sometimes 9' wide, rounded at the ape.x, cuneate at the
RF2RDX291–Little Free Library sign on succulent flower box full of Sedum Ternatum the Three Leaved Stonecrop
RMMTXETN–. English: Pelargonium ternatum . 29 October 2011. Nicolao Josepho Jacquin 475 Pelargonium ternatum B544
RMPG05BT–. The structure and development of mosses and ferns (Archegoniatae). Plant morphology; Mosses; Ferns. Fic. 141.—A, B, Boirychium simplex, slightly enlarged; C, B. ternatum, X %> ^f 1^^^ segment of B. lunaria; E, leaf segment of B. Virginianum, natural size; F, portion of sterile leaf segment of Helminthostachys Zeylanica; G, fragment of the sporan- giophore of the same enlarged. A, B, C after Luerssen; D, F after Hooker.. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustratio
RM2PX10K7–Speckled wood butterfly, Pararge aegeria on Waldsteinia ternata
RM2BXE0ED–Botrychium ternatum Thunb Sw
RM2AFJ99M–. The structure and development of mosses and ferns (Archegoniatae). segment (Fig. 148),and exact median sections show that at the apex of the broadlyconical prominence which is the first stage of the young sporan-giumi there is a large pyramidal cell with a truncate apex.Holtzman (i) thinks the sporangium may be traceable to asingle cell, and that the divisions at first are like those in athree-sided apical cell. I was unable to satisfy myself on this * B. ternatum = B. obliquum (Underwood (5) p. 72). vii PTERIDOPHYTA—riLICINEAl—OPHIOGLOSSACEAl 269 point, but the youngest stages found by me i
RF2RDX1TT–Wooden flower garden box with blooming white succulent flowers on Three Leaved Stonecrop
RMMAB53A–. Dr. L. Rabenhorst's Kryptogamen-Flora von Deutschland, Oesterreich und der Schweiz . 795. D. teriiatiim (Bonord.). Syn. Cladotrichum ternatum Bonord. Handb. allgem. Mykol. p. 78 (1851;, Fig. 84. — Fuckel Symb. p. 356. Didymocladium ternatum Sacc. Syll. IV, 187 (1886). Exs. Fuckel Eungi rhen. 1524. Rasen wollig, weiss. Konidienträger auf- steigend, wenig septiert, verzweigt, Aeste kurz, fast opponiert oder zu drei an dreiquirligen, fädigen, an der Spitze angeschwollenen Aestchen abgehend. Konidien ellipsoidisch, zweizeilig, an der Scheidewand zuletzt eingeschnürt, in ziemlich langen Ketten, h
RM2AWWKE5–The structure & development of the mosses and ferns (Archegoniatae) . never seen,either in B. Virginianum or B. ternatum, any indication thatthe growth of the root - cap was due exclusively to thedevelopment of these segments, as Holle states both for B.lunaria and Ophioglossum vulgatum. In both species ofBotrychium examined by me the growth of the root-cap wasevidently due in part to the division of cells in the outer partof the lateral segments, so that in exactly median sections 1 Holle (I). VIII THE PTERIDOPHYTA—OPHJOGLOSSACEAL 249 there was not the clear separation of the root-cap from th
RM2AWWKX7–The structure & development of the mosses and ferns (Archegoniatae) . lder ones.Sections either transverse or longitudinal, through the root tip,when compared with those of Ophioglossum, show a verymuch greater regularity in the disposition of the cells. Thisis less marked in B. ternatum, and probably an examination ^ Janczewski (4). - Russow (5). ^ Janczewski (4), p. 69. 248 MOSSES AND FERNS CHAP. of such forms as B. simplex will show an approximation to thecondition found in Ophioglossum, although Holles ^ figure ofB. lunaria shows even greater regularity in the arrangement ofthe apical meri
RM2AFJB8E–. The structure and development of mosses and ferns (Archegoniatae). 141.—A, B, Botrychium simplex, slightly enlarged; C, B. ternatum, X % 5 D, leafsegment of B. lunaria; E, leaf segment of B. Virginianum, natural size; F, portionof sterile leaf segment of Helminthostachys Zeylanica; G, fragment of the sporan-giophore of the same enlarged. A, B, C after Luerssen; D, F after Hooker. VII P TERIDOPH Y TA—FILICINE/E—0 PIIIOGLOSSA CEAB 261 giophore not yet differentiated. At the base of the youngestleaf is the stem apex. The wliole bnd is covered in this specieswith numerous short hairs, which are
RM2AXB6X0–Horsford's Nurseries . oz. S. Telephium. The common Live Forever ofour meadows. Good for rocky, barren situa-tions. 10 cts. each, $1 per doz. S. ternatum. Stems spreading; 3 to 6 incheshigh. 15 cts. each. SILENE alpestris. Alpine Catchfly. A low, per-ennial, white-flowered plant, 5 to 6 inches high,forming tufts. A fine plant for the low borderas well as for rockwork. 20 cts. each. Seeds,8 cts. per pkt. SPIR^A Aruncus. See Aruncus, page 4.S. Filipendula. See Ulmaria, page 27. STACHYS lanata. Woolly Woundwort. Theblooms are striped, in whorls; leaves thick, softand woolly.A fine bor-der plantbl
RM2CF2YFW–. The fern lover's companion; a guide for the Northeastern States and Canada. lade sessile or slightly stalked.Many botanists prefer to place this fern as a variety of thematricary, but others regard it as a form of Botrychiumsimplex. Borders of maple swamps, Vermont, NewHampshire, Massachusetts, and New York. (5) Common Grape Fern Botrychium. obliquum. Botrychium ternatum, var. obRquum Botrychium dissectum, var. obliquum Rootstock short, its base including the buds of suc-ceeding years. Fronds two to twehc inches or more high.Leafy or sterile segment triangular, ternate, long-petioled,springi
RM2BTWNXP–Clerodendrum ternatum var ternatum. 24 May 20181
RM2BXDDXH–Eriogonum ternatum JT Howell Eriogonum ternatum JT Howell.
RM2CF2Y9G–. The fern lover's companion; a guide for the Northeastern States and Canada. Bolrycliiinn ohliquiim, var. onddcnsc Note: A Bolryc)iiiini not uncommon in Georgia and Alabama,named by Swartz B. hmariaides, deserves careful study. It isknown as the Southern Botrvchium. 2 202 The Fern Lovers Companion. Botrychium obliquum, var. dissedum The Fern Lovers Companion 203 (6) Ternate Grape FernBotrychium ternatum, ^a^. intermediiuiiBotri/Cliium obFiquum, var. intermedium Leaf more diided than in obliqinim and the numeroussegments not so long and pointed, but large, fleshy, ovateor obovate (including x
RM2CF2Y3Y–. The fern lover's companion; a guide for the Northeastern States and Canada. Botrychium obliquum, var. dissedum The Fern Lovers Companion 203 (6) Ternate Grape FernBotrychium ternatum, ^a^. intermediiuiiBotri/Cliium obFiquum, var. intermedium Leaf more diided than in obliqinim and the numeroussegments not so long and pointed, but large, fleshy, ovateor obovate (including xnr. austride), crenulate, and moreor less toothed. Sandy soil, pastures and open woods. More northerlyin its range — New England and New York. Var.Tutaefblium. More slender, rarely over six or se^-en incheshigh; sterile seg
RM2C1BRWR–Clerodendrum ternatum var lanceolatum Moldenke Clerodendrum ternatum var lanceolatum Moldenke.
RM2CF2XY9–. The fern lover's companion; a guide for the Northeastern States and Canada. Ternate Grape Fern Botrychium tern at it tn var. intermedium (Reduced). Ternate Grape Fern Botryehiuni ternatum var. intermedium (Two stocks, reduced) 204 The Feex Lovers Compaxiox (7) Rattlesnake Ferx. Botrychium rirginianum Fronds six inches to two feet high. Sterile segmentsessile abo^e the middle of the plant, broadly triangular,thin, membranaceous, ternate. Pinnules lanceolate, deeplypinnatifid; ultimate segments olilong or lanceolate andscarcely or not at all spatulate. Fertile i)art long-stalked,two to three p
RMRE37EE–. New England ferns and their common allies; an easy method of determining the species. Ferns. BOTRYCHIUM TERNATUM sub-var. intermedium with fertile portion. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Eastman, Helen, 1863-. Boston, New York, Houghton, Mifflin and Co.
RMRDKER8–. Our garden flowers; a popular study of their native lands, their life histories, and their structural affiliations. Flowers. SEDIUM. Sedum. Sedum ternatum. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Keeler, Harriet L. (Harriet Louise), 1846-1921. New York, C. Scribner's Sons
RMRE0R6R–. The Eusporangiatae; the comparative morphology of the Ophioglossaceae and Marattiaceae. Ophioglossaceae; Marattiaceae. THE ADULT SPOROPHYTE 103 noted in the bundle ofB. virginianum. The position of the sporangiophore is some- what different in different species. In Eubotrychium it is attached, as a rule, close to the junction of the sterile lamina and the petiole, very much as it is in Euophioglossum. In B. ternatum and B. ohliquum the long peduncle is inserted very much further down, sometimes almost at the level of the ground, so that at first sight the spor- angiophore seems to be quite i
RMRE1RCG–. The Eusporangiatae; the comparative morphology of the Ophioglossaceae and Marattiaceae. Ophioglossaceae; Marattiaceae. 194 THE MARATTIALES even more. The thick, fleshy texture of the leaflets, much like that of Botrychium ternatum or B. silaifolium, at once distinguishes Marattia from any of the large leptosporangiate ferns with which it may be associated. The resemblance to the leaves of Botrychium is especially marked in the young plants growing from the stipular buds. These leaves show a marked triangular outline, curiously similar to that of the larger species oi Botrychium {see. plate 1
RMRFR7K9–. Carnegie Institution of Washington publication. 194 THE MARATTIALES even more. The thick, fleshy texture of the leaflets, much like that of Botrychium ternatum or />'. silaifolium, at once distinguishes Marattia from any of" the large leptosporangiate ferns with which it may be associated. The resemblance to the leaves of Botrychium is especially marked in the young plants growing from the stipular buds. These leaves show a marked triangulai outline, curiously similar to that of the larger species of Botrychium (see plate 12, B). The venation of the leaf- lets is also very like, rese
RMRFR8P9–. Carnegie Institution of Washington publication. THE ADULT SPOROPHYTK 103 noted in the bundle of B. virgintanum. The position of the sporangiophore is some- what different in different species. In Eubotrychium it is attached, as a rule, close to the junction of the sterile lamina and the petiole, very much as it is in Euophioglossum. In B. ternatum and B. obltquum the long peduncle is inserted very much further down, sometimes almost at the level of the ground, so that at first sight the spor- angiophore seems to be quite independent of the sterile leaf. In B. virgintanum ph-. x.l. Fig. 76.
RMRE37E7–. New England ferns and their common allies; an easy method of determining the species. Ferns. BOTRYCHIUM TERNATUM RUIVEFOLIUM. a. Fertile portion. if. Sterile portion c. LITTLE GRAPE FERN with fertile portion d. MATRICARY GRAPE FERN with fertile portion. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Eastman, Helen, 1863-. Boston, New York, Houghton, Mifflin and Co.
RMRR22C0–. Our native ferns and their allies : with synoptical descriptions of the American Pteridophyta north of Mexico. Ferns. Fig. 44. Vernation of B. tematum^ Swz. (After Davenport.) •Buds pilose; sterile segments usually long-stalked. ternatum, Swz. Frond fleshy, the |/ /common stalk very short; sterile segment I// / broadly pentagonal or triangular, ternate; ^C^^^ the three primary divisions also stalked, as broad as long, pinnately decompound ; ulti- mate divisions varying from round-reniform to triangular-lanceolate, entire or variously toothed and incised; fertile segment long- stalked, bi—qua
RMRR22C7–. Our native ferns and their allies : with synoptical descriptions of the American Pteridophyta north of Mexico. Ferns. Fig. 44. Vernation of B. tematum^ Swz. (After Davenport.) •Buds pilose; sterile segments usually long-stalked. ternatum, Swz. Frond fleshy, the |/ /common stalk very short; sterile segment I// / broadly pentagonal or triangular, ternate; ^C^^^ the three primary divisions also stalked, as broad as long, pinnately decompound ; ulti- mate divisions varying from round-reniform to triangular-lanceolate, entire or variously toothed and incised; fertile segment long- stalked, bi—qua
RMRD4T3A–. Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising suggestions for cultivation of horticultural plants, descriptions of the species of fruits, vegetables, flowers, and ornamental plants sold in the United States and Canada, together with geographical and biographical sketches. Gardening. 2284. Sedum ternatum tA i-r;). are about 1}.^ in. long and recurved; anthers brownish purple. July. Mts. of Va. and Ala. —Hardy in Mass. and desirable for edgings or rockeries, according to Ed- ward Gillett. 15. populi!61ium, Pall. A very distinct species by rea- son of its shrubby base, stalked, poplar-shaped
RMRE9MCY–. Contributions from the Botanical Laboratory, vol. 11. Botany; Botany. Ahove, Sedum Nevi; belozv Sedum ternatum (Sept., 1933) tions. Ranging across the southern states from northern Georgia to Missouri, and locally northward into Michigan, New York, and Massachusetts, it is evidently adaptable to a variety of climatic conditions. It bears cymes of small white flowers in Mav. The leaves vary considerably in size from one colony to another, and a particularly small form was named by Praeger^ variety minus. The large-leaved extreme, which is especially desirable for cultivation, has ap- parently
RMRE9MD6–. Contributions from the Botanical Laboratory, vol. 11. Botany; Botany. §SEDA GENUINA: Two species. (1) Sedum ternatum Michaux. 'V^^HiLE almost always correctly named ^^ by horticultural writers and dealers, this Sedum is not used as freely in our gardens as it should be. Unlike most mem- bers of the genus, it is primarily a woodland plant and grows not only on shaded rocks, but also on alluvial flats along streams. Spreading rapidly by root-stocks, it forms an excellent sub-evergreen groundcover and occupies sunless locations where few plants of this habit will thrive. It is more or less indi
RMRE2CBB–. Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising suggestions for cultivation of horticultural plants, descriptions of the species of fruits, vegetables, flowers, and ornamental plants sold in the United States and Canada, together with geographical and biographical sketches. Gardening. 01 in o^ de. 2284. Sedum ternatum (X ^a)- are altout PJ in. long and recurved; antlu-rs brownish purple. July. Mts. of Va. and Ala.—Hardy in Mass. and desirable for edgings or rockeries, according to Ed- ward Gillett. 15. populiiolium, Pall. A very distinct species by rea- son i>f its shrubby base, stalked,
Download Confirmation
Please complete the form below. The information provided will be included in your download confirmation