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Topic: Bird's foot trefoil


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In the News (Mon 28 May 12)

  
 trefoil - OneLook Dictionary Search
Phrases that include trefoil: birds foot trefoil, tick trefoil, bean trefoil, bird's-foot trefoil, bird's foot trefoil, more...
Words similar to trefoil: clover, medic, medick, more...
Trefoil : Online Plain Text English Dictionary [home, info]
www.onelook.com /?w=trefoil&ls=a   (291 words)

  
 AGR-104 'FERGUS' BIRD'S-FOOT TREFOIL
A mixture of equal parts of certified Empire and imported French bird's-foot trefoil seed was sown in April 1954 as one of the treatments in a grazing experiment on the experimental farm in Woodford County, Kentucky.
Favorable characteristics of bird's-foot trefoil are that it:
Trefoil may be sown with a grass without the use of a herbicide in spring or late summer.
www.ca.uky.edu /agc/pubs/agr/agr104/agr104.htm   (1722 words)

  
 Birdsfoot trefoil
A native of Europe, introduced into the U.S. Birds-foot trefoil is drought resistant and produces nutritious, palatable forage for livestock and deer.
The common name comes from the slender, spreading seed pods that resemble toes on a bird's foot.
www.lib.ksu.edu /wildflower/birdsfoot.html   (1722 words)

  
 Bird's Foot Trefoil seeds, Lotus corniculatus at American Meadows
However, like yarrow, Birdsfoot Trefoil is best used as a clump or specimen planting, rather than as part of a mixture.
Bird's Foot Trefoil seeds is one of 80 species in our Wildflower Seed Encyclopedia.
Bird's Foot Trefoil seeds, Lotus corniculatus at American Meadows
www.americanmeadows.com /bulk_ind_detail.cfm?itemid=133   (1722 words)

  
 Birdsfoot Trefoil
Birdsfoot Trefoil gets its name from the slender, spreading seed pods that look like a bird's foot.
Birdsfoot Trefoil is very tolerant of drought because of its deep roots.
This improves the quality of the soil and helps the other plants that grow near the Birdsfoot trefoil.
www.diamon-naturals.com /birdsfoot.htm   (1722 words)

  
 ID-139
Birdsfoot trefoil visual characteristics-- each leaf with three leaflets at tip and two at base of petiole, bright yellow flowers, pods at end of flowering stem resembling a bird's foot, and many stems per plant ranging from 1-3 feet long.
Birdsfoot trefoil is the best long-lived legume for growing in a mixture with Kentucky bluegrass as permanent pasture in the northern half of Indiana.
Birdsfoot trefoil seedlings are slow to establish; therefore, the species is best used for long-term pasture or possibly hay.
www.agcom.purdue.edu /AgCom/Pubs/ID/ID-139.html   (1722 words)

  
 La Crosse Tribune - News
The design, done by Mead & Hunt engineering consulting firm, was to feature Autumn Brilliance Serviceberry trees, boulders and Birdsfoot Trefoil ground cover, said Dave Esser, city civil engineer who managed the project.
"It is called birdsfoot because the seed pod looks like a bird's foot.
Trefoil grows as a wildflower along sidewalks on Lang Drive near the marsh, and on medians in poor, sandy soil, said Joel Olson, an owner of Hillview Greenhouse.
www.lacrossetribune.com /articles/2004/05/20/news/z00lead.txt   (1722 words)

  
 BIRDSFOOT TREFOIL PRODUCTION
Birdsfoot trefoil generally has low seedling vigour and this factor is often the cause of establishment failures.
Birdsfoot trefoil is a leafy, fine-stemmed legume which obtained its name from its seed pod clusters, each of which resembles a bird's foot (Figure 1).
Birdsfoot trefoil stands should not be cut nor grazed during the critical fall harvesting period.
www.plant.uoguelph.ca /performance_recommendations/ofcc/pub/btprod.htm   (1722 words)

  
 Lotus uliginosus - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lotus uliginosus or Greater Bird's-foot Trefoil is a member of the Pea Family ( Fabaceae).
As the common name suggests, it is a larger plant than the related Common Bird's-foot Trefoil, growing to 20-80 cm tall, with larger (particularly broader) leaflets 10-25 mm long and 10-20 mm broad.
Other names include the synonym Lotus pedunculatus, and the common names Greater Birdsfoot trefoil, Big Trefoil, Large Bird's-foot Trefoil.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Lotus_uliginosus   (1722 words)

  
 A Photo Flora - L
Lotus corniculatus - Bird's-foot-trefoil U-shape upper sepals leaves fruit
Lotus glaber - Narrow-leaved Bird's-foot-trefoil seed head leaf plant
Lotus pedunculatus - Large Bird's-foot-trefoil leaf seed pod
www.aphotoflora.com /page15.html   (1722 words)

  
 The Global Compendium of Weeds: Lotus uliginosus Schkuhr
Common name(s): isomaite, greater lotus, greater bird's foot trefoil, large bird's foot trefoil, marsh bird's foot trefoil
NOTE: for now (until database/website are updated), you must manually search for each data source in the GWC Data Sources document.)
The Global Compendium of Weeds: Lotus uliginosus Schkuhr
www.hear.org /gcw/html/autogend/species/11792.HTM   (1722 words)

  
 * Lotus - (Plants): Definition
The Lotus hamatus Greene more commonly known as San Diego bird's-foot trefoil can be referenced under the symbol LOHA2.The botany heiarchy of the San Diego bird's-foot trefoil is classified within group Dicot of the Fabaceae family...
Among the plants of the family are the water lilies, lotuses, and pond lilies (called also cow lilies and spatterdocks) of the genera Nymphaea,...
Mallotus Japonicus - A summer-leafing shrub from Japan and C. China, as yet little known, but thriving in high ground at Haslemere, in Surrey.
en.mimi.hu /plants/lotus.html   (1722 words)

  
 Leaf Mines of Lepidoptera
Lotus corniculatus (Bird's-foot Trefoil), Lotus uliginosus (Greater Bird's-foot Trefoil)
The frass is arranged in a spiral and a circular blotch is formed.
www.leafmines.co.uk /html/Lepidoptera/L.lotella3.htm   (1722 words)

  
 PlantFiles: Image of Bird's Foot Trefoil, Baby's Slippers, Bacon and Eggs (Lotus corniculatus)
PlantFiles: Image of Bird's Foot Trefoil, Baby's Slippers, Bacon and Eggs (Lotus corniculatus)
Bird's Foot Trefoil, Baby's Slippers, Bacon and Eggs
Powered by Scif 5.3 build 215 StandardOut, Inc.
plantsdatabase.com /showpicture/19140   (1722 words)

  
 LOTUS CORNICULATUS Meaning and Definition - Dictionary - eLook.org
Synonyms: bird's foot trefoil, bird's foot clover, babies' slippers, bacon and eggs, Lotus corniculatus
LOTUS CORNICULATUS Meaning and Definition - Dictionary - eLook.org
www.elook.org /dictionary/lotus-corniculatus.html   (1722 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - trefoil, Plant (Plants) - Encyclopedia
The bird's-foot trefoil (Lotus corniculatus) is an Old World forage plant and weed that has been naturalized in North America; the prairie trefoil (L.
Tick trefoil is a name for the tickseed, or beggarweed.
reference.allrefer.com /encyclopedia/T/trefoil.html   (1722 words)

  
 birdfoot deervetch: Lotus corniculatus (Fabales: Fabaceae)
Fabales > Fabaceae > Lotus corniculatus L. Synonym(s): Birdsfoot trefoil, bloomfell, cat's clover, crowtoes, garden bird's foot trefoil, garden-birdsfoot-trefoil, ground honeysuckle
The PLANTS Database, Version 3.1, National Plant Data Center, Baton Rouge, LA 70874-4490 USA.
www.invasive.org /browse/subject.cfm?sub=5949   (1722 words)

  
 ITIS Standard Report Page: Lotus corniculatus
Lotus corniculatus L.-- birdfoot deervetch, Birdsfoot trefoil, bloomfell, cat's clover, crowtoes, garden bird's-foot-trefoil, garden birdsfoot trefoil, ground honeysuckle
www.itis.usda.gov /servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=26362   (1722 words)

  
 Autumn 1996
Orchis simia (Monkey Orchid), Polygala vulgaris (Milkwort), Lotus corniculatus (Bird's-foot Trefoil), Briza media (Quaking-grass), Campanula glomerata (Clustered Bellflower), Carex filiformis (Downy-fruited Sedge), Thesium humifusum (Bastard Toadflax), Cuscuta epithymum (Dodder), Orchid militaris (Military Orchid), Cephalanthera damasonium (White Helleborine), Ophrys insectifera (Fly Orchid), Neottia nidus-avis (Bird's-nest Orchid), Poa nemoralis (Wood Meadow-grass), Leucojum aestivum ssp.
rbg-web2.rbge.org.uk /wfsoc/2903a.htm   (1722 words)

  
 Lotus (genus) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The genus Lotus ( Bird's-foot Trefoil, Trefoil or Deervetch) contains approximately 150 species distributed world-wide.
Lotus is a legume and its members are adapted to a wide range of habitats from coastal environments to high altitudes.
Most species have leaves with three leaflets, but also two large stipules at the base roughly equal in size to the leaflets, thus appearing to have five leaflets; some species have pinnate leaves with up to 15 leaflets.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Lotus_(genus)   (1722 words)

  
 Lotus (Fabaceae): Botanik
Birdfoot Trefoil (Lotus corniculatus) - Text and Image.
Bird's-foot Trefoil (Lotus corniculatus) - Text and Image.
Wright's Deer-vetch (Lotus wrightii) - Text and Image.
www.infochembio.ethz.ch /links/botanik_bohnenerbsen_lotus.html   (1722 words)

  
 Bird Exotic Plant
Lathyrus sphaericus Smooth Pod Pea Lotus corniculatus Bird's Foot Trefoil Lotus uliginosus Small Trefoil Lupinus...
www.plants-n-seeds.com /6/bird-exotic-plant.html   (1722 words)

  
 Turkey Diets and Feeding by Region For Hunters
buckwheat, alfalfa, big bluestem*, clover (white, red), annual ryegrass, crabgrass, Kentucky bluegrass, bird foot trefoil, deer tongue, perennialrye grass, corn, foxtail, ladino clover, hairy vetch, millet, indian grass*, oats, latcho flatpea, orchard grass, little bluestem*, red fescue, red top, timothy, sorghum, wheat, soybeans, winter rye, sudan grass, swit grass*
alfalfa, browntop, millet, annual ryegrass, birdsfoot trefoil, canadawildrye*, barley, bluestem* (big, little), Kentucky bluegrass, bergamot*,buckwheat, lespedeza, black-eyed susan*, clover (alsike, red, ladino, white), milo, broom sedge*, perennial ryegrass, junegrass*, corn, sand dropseed*,ox-eye daisy*, indiangrass*, smooth brome, panicgrass*, oats, soybeans,sideoats grama*, orchardgrass, sunflower, sorghum, switchgrass*, timothy,wheat
autumn olive, bittersweet*, blackberry*, crabapple*, rugosa rose, bluebeech*, dogwood* (flowering, silky, grey, red osier), elderberry*, hazelnut*, hawthorn*, honeysuckle*, japanese barberry, hophornbeam*, staghorn sumac*, jet bead, Viburnum species* (highbush cranberry, multiflora rose blackhaw, maple-leaf), juniper*, spicebush*, wild grape*, winterberry*, witch hazel*
www.tracker-outdoors.com /diet.htm   (1722 words)

  
 Flower Essence Profile Lotus Or Water Lily
Lotus is also the name of a genus in the pea family, Leguminosae, which contains such plants as the bird's-foot trefoil, Lotus corniculatus.
Lotus essence to many of our special formulas for animals because as well as stimulating spiritual evolvement it acts as a "booster" to other flower essences intensifying and spiritualizing their effects.
The white lotus is a shallow-water, night-blooming plant with a creeping rootstock (rhizome) that sends up long-stalked, nearly circular, dark green leathery leaves, which float on the surface.
www.anaflora.com /articles/fe-profiles/lotus-flower.html   (827 words)

  
 PLANTS Profile for Lotus pinnatus (meadow bird's-foot trefoil) USDA PLANTS
PLANTS Profile for Lotus pinnatus (meadow bird's-foot trefoil)
See all the Lotus thumbnails at the PLANTS Gallery
See county distributions for the following states by clicking on them below or on the map.
plants.usda.gov /java/profile?symbol=LOPI2   (89 words)

  
 Gardenstown 2005
We enjoyed seeing some fabulous plant life adorning the cliffs on our march back to Gardenstown; thrift in abundance, red and white campion, spring squill, tormentil and birds foot trefoil to name but a few in all their splendour and scurvy grass and other more obvious maritime residents making a welcome appearance.
Gardenstown is a part of Scotland that, I have to say, was totally unknown to me before my eventful weekend.
Another would beachcomb at Gardenstown itself, looking for artefacts for an evening arts activity and finish in the local pub and a final group would explore the cliffs and the only mainland gannet colony in Scotland between Crovie and Troup Head itself.
www.speygrian.org.uk /kcgamrie05.html   (1140 words)

  
 Rare Flowers and Ruined Choirs
My romance with bird's-foot trefoil, mountain avens and herb Robert came about by accident.
When I flew into Shannon last July and met my mother, Sheila, for a 10-day holiday, it was with the intention of viewing shore birds and, with luck, a few seals.
Lemaneagh Castle, worthy of at least a few ghosts, stands proud in a stretch of windswept farmland (equally creepy was the electric fence surrounding the field and the old Irish codger who scowled at the few cars parked just beyond his land).
www.irishside.com /tis/content/nyt/127.htm   (1140 words)

  
 Durlson Park main page
The downland is a mosaic of short turf and tiny, colourful flowers— typical limestone plants like the pink Centaury, yellow Horseshoe Vetch, Birds-foot Trefoil and Milkwort (which in May transforms the land into a haze of blue).
On the breezy cliff-top, plants adapted to salt-spray and wind can be found, Thrift or Sea Pink, Sea Campion, Wild Carrot and Rock Samphire, and the late-flowering Golden Samphire.
Other migrants like the Whitethroat, Blackcap and Chiffcaff nest in the scrub in the summer, exploiting the rich insect life to feed their young.
www.durlston.co.uk /main.asp?pg=wildlifeintroduction   (1140 words)

  
 UTB Butterflies
Some wild flowers were growing in the clearing, such as Birds foot Trefoil and also Heather which was being used for nectar, but the foodplants for these 2 species of butterfly could not be located.
There I was greeted by four male Silver-washed Fritillaries fighting for space with nine other butterfly species (Brimstone, Large White, Small White, Green-veined White, Peacock, Small Tortoiseshell, Marbled White, Gatekeeper and Meadow Brown) and at least one Six-Spot Burnet Moth, not to mention the bees and hoverflies.
The majority of the surviving butterflies were feeding from the Scabious and comprised: Small White (1), Green-veined White (6), Small Copper (6), Common Blue (11), Brown Argus (2) and Small Tortoiseshell (1).
www.wendy.campbell6.btinternet.co.uk /utb_butterflies_Dec04.htm   (1140 words)

  
 Sedgemoor District Council - The Dune Slacks
Burnet Moths may be seen on Bird's-foot trefoil and their caterpillars construct their cocoons high up on grass stems where it is difficult for predators to reach them.
Many of the plants found here provide food for the larvae of moths.
The orange and black ringed caterpillar of the Cinnabar Moth feed on ragwort.
www.sedgemoor.gov.uk /index.cfm?articleid=1907&articleaction=print   (341 words)

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