Flowering annuals generally bloom nonstop before dying at the end of the year or season. Perennials return every year, providing either season-long color, a burst of blossoms followed by sporadic ...
Flowers. Who doesn’t enjoy them? Here in Central Florida, a great many of our landscape plants bloom for months on end – and do it year after year. A 10-foot hibiscus shrub, for example, might live ...
Gardeners know that annual and biennial plants die after they flower and produce seeds, while perennials flower and seed for multiple years. Annuals and biennials are monocarpic, which means they die ...
Flowering annuals generally bloom nonstop before dying at the end of the year or season. Perennials return every year, providing either seasonlong color, a burst of blossoms followed by sporadic ...
The absence of cross-pollination in Cirsium palustre and Cirsium vulgare resulted in reduced achene production while the achenes produced were heavier than those produced after cross-pollination.
Some monocarpic plants, whose name is derived from the Greek for single (“mono”) and fruit (“carpos”), have a cult following among a subset of gardeners who revel in what can be years of anticipation, ...
Some monocarpic plants, whose name is derived from the Greek for single ("mono") and fruit ("carpos"), have a cult following among a subset of gardeners who revel in what can be years of anticipation, ...