Species Search

clear
1 – 23 of 23 Search: “stinkweed”
View Grid List
Jimsonweed - Photo (c) stephen, some rights reserved (CC BY), uploaded by stephen CC
Jimsonweed (Datura stramonium) Info
Datura stramonium, known by the English names jimsonweed or devil's snare, is a plant in the nightshade family. It is believed to have originated in Mexico, but has now become naturalized in many other regions. Other common names for D. stramonium include thornapple and moon flower, and it has the Spanish name toloache. Other names for the plant include hell's bells, devil's trumpet, devil's weed, tolguacha (Wikipedia)
Stinkweed - Photo (c) Mike Plagens, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Mike Plagens CC
Stinkweed (Genus Cleomella) Info
Cleomella is a small genus of about ten species of flowering plants. Like their relatives, the cleomes, plants of this genus have traditionally been included in the caper family Capparaceae but have recently been moved into a new family, Cleomaceae. Cleomella are annual wildflowers native to the dry and desert regions of western North America. They are similar to cleomes in appearance. They are erect and branching with leaves divided into three leaflets and inflorescences of. (Wikipedia)
Stinknet - Photo (c) Jay Keller, all rights reserved, uploaded by Jay Keller C
Stinknet (Oncosiphon pilulifer) Info
Oncosiphon pilulifer (often spelled piluliferum) is a flowering plant in the daisy family (Asteraceae) native to southern Africa. It is known as globe chamomile and sometimes stinknet due to its strong, unpleasant odor. It is a species of "least concern" (low conservation concern) in South Africa and considered invasive in some parts of North America. (Wikipedia)
Skunkweed - Photo (c) Saskia Raether, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Saskia Raether CC
Skunkweed (Navarretia squarrosa) Info
Navarretia squarrosa (skunkbush, skunkweed, or California stinkweed) is a spreading annual plant from North America which is noted for its skunk-like odour. It grows to between 10 and 60 cm in height and has tubular lilac pink to deep blue flowers up to 12 mm in diameter in dense terminal heads, encircled by a spiny sepals and bracts. The leaves are pinnately lobed and spiny. (Wikipedia)
Long-spined Thorn-Apple - Photo (c) Santiago Mailhos, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Santiago Mailhos CC
Long-spined Thorn-Apple (Datura ferox) Info
Datura ferox, commonly known as long spined thorn apple and fierce thornapple, as well as Angel's-trumpets, is a species of Datura. Like all such species, every part of the plant contains deadly toxins that can kill animals (including humans) that ingest it. Its fruit, red-brown when ripe, has unusually long thorns or spikes. (Wikipedia)
Sandveld Stinkweed - Photo (c) Andrew Massyn, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Andrew Massyn CC
Sandveld Stinkweed (Oncosiphon suffruticosus) Info
Onocosiphon suffruticosus (often spelled suffruticosum), the shrubby mayweed, is a flowering plant native to Namibia and the Western Cape and Northern Cape provinces of South Africa. In Afrikaans it is known as knoppiesstinkkruid, the "button stink herb". The species is listed on the SANBI Red List as "safe" (LC). (Wikipedia)
Mojave Stinkweed - Photo (c) Michael R Ostrowski, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Michael R Ostrowski CC
Mojave Stinkweed (Cleomella obtusifolia) Info
Cleomella obtusifolia is a species of flowering plant in the cleome family known by the common name Mojave stinkweed. It is native to the Mojave Desert and adjacent hills, where it grows in alkaline soils in the desert scrub. It is an annual herb producing a rough, hairy stem up to 90 centimeters long. The branching stem grows erect when new and then the branches droop to the ground with age, forming a bushy clump or... (Wikipedia)
Chiricahua Mountain Stinkweed - Photo (c) Richard Reynolds, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Richard Reynolds CC
Chiricahua Mountain Stinkweed (Cleomella longipes) Info
Cleomella longipes, the Chiricahua Mountain stinkweed, is a plant species native to northern Mexico and to the southwestern United States. It has been reported from Chihuahua, San Luis Potosí, trans-Pecos Texas, New Mexico (Grant and Hidalgo Counties) Arizona (Cochise County). It is found on saline or alkaline flats at elevations of 500–1000 m. (Wikipedia)