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Chamaenerion angustifolium (Fireweed) plants
Genus species:
   Chamaenerion angustifolium
Common name:
   Fireweed
Genus:
   Chamaenerion
Family:
   Onagraceae
Order:
   Myrtales
Chamaenerion angustifolium (Fireweed) plants
Genus species:
   Chamaenerion angustifolium
Common name:
   Fireweed
Genus:
   Chamaenerion
Family:
   Onagraceae
Order:
   Myrtales
Chamaenerion angustifolium (Fireweed) plants
Genus species:
   Chamaenerion angustifolium
Common name:
   Fireweed
Genus:
   Chamaenerion
Family:
   Onagraceae
Order:
   Myrtales

Genus (Plantae): Chamaenerion

Chamaenerion is a genus of flowering plants in the family Onagraceae (the evening primrose or willowherb family). It is sometimes included in the genus Epilobium.[ Members of the genus may be called willowherbs (along with Epilobium), or fireweeds, based on a common name used for C. angustifolium. They are upright herbaceous perennials, growing from a woody base or from rhizomes, with racemes of usually purple to pink flowers. All species are found in the northern hemisphere. Most occur in moist habitats; C. angustifolium is the exception, favoring disturbed ground.

Description

Chamaenerion species are upright herbaceous perennials with either unbranched stems or, much less often, slightly branched stems. They either have a woody base or grow from rhizomes. The leaves are generally spirally arranged on the stems and are usually narrow, rarely ovate. The inflorescence is a simple or slightly branched raceme. Individual flowers have four petals that are rose-purple to pink, rarely white. The petals are free at the base rather than united in a floral tube, as in Epilobium. The lower petals are narrower than the upper ones, making the flower radially unsymmetric (zygomorphic). There are eight more-or-less equally sized stamens, and a long, four-lobed style. The fruit is a long, thin, four-chambered (loculicidal) capsule that splits to reveal the many seeds. The seeds have a tuft of hairs at one end.


Reference: Wikipedia

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