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Saturday, 26 March 2016

Buck's-horn plantain, Minutina or Erba stella - Plantago coronopus subsp. commutata (Guss.) Pilg. - Λιθόσπαστος - Cyprus

Plantago coronopus (known as buck's-horn plantain, minutina or erba stella) is a herbaceous annual to perennial flowering plant in the family Plantaginaceae. It produces a basal rosette of narrowly lance-shaped leaves up to 25 centimeters long that are toothed or deeply divided. The inflorescences grow erect to about 4 to 7 cm in height. They have dense spikes of flowers which sometimes curve.[clarification needed] Each flower has four whitish lobes each measuring about a millimeter long. Plantago coronopus mainly grows on sandy or gravelly soils close to the sea. It is native to Eurasia and North Africa but it can be found elsewhere, including the United States, Australia, and New Zealand as an introduced species.

It is sometimes grown as a leaf vegetable, mostly incorporated in salad mixes for specialty markets.[citation needed] Recently it has become popular as a frost-hardy winter crop for farmers in northern climates, and is usually grown in unheated hightunnels
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Photos Apostolos Antreas 19/3/2016 by George Konstantinou





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