126 Bilder zum Thema "Phytolacca" bei ClipDealer

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Postage stamp Uruguay 1954 Ombu Tree, Phytolacca Dioica
Kermesbeere - Pokeweed 03
Kermesbeere - Pokeweed 01
Kermesbeere - Pokeweed 02
Kermesbeere - Pokeweed 03
Kermesbeere - Pokeweed 04
Kermesbeere - Pokeweed 03
Phytolacca floweror arborea turkish grapes
Pokeweed or Phytolacca americana. Black berries of phytolacca.
Phytolacca americana plant with pink inflorescences, tassels and black berries
Phytolacca pokeweed berries
Phytolacca plant and berries
Phytolacca Acinosa
American pokeweed or poke sallet or dragonberries plant with ripe and green berries. Phytolacca americana family Phytolaccaceae.
Pokeweed (phytolacca) in June, when flowering
Phytolacca americana plant with fruit
Common pokeweed or Phytolacca americana, American poke weed, Inkberry, Poke. Medicinal plants in the garden. Medicinal plants in the garden.
wild plant Phytolacca americana, note shallow depth of field
Phytolacca americana , Pokeweed .
Pokeweed (Phytolacca acinosa) with purple berries and green foliage in a garden
Phytolacca icosandra (button pokeweed, tropical pokeweed, twenty stamens, bayam hutan). It is used to treat unspecified medicinal disorders, as a poison and a medicine and for food.
Pokeweed plants
Pokeweed in early June
berries of Phytolacca sp in forest
berries of Phytolacca sp in forest
berries of Phytolacca sp in forest
Ripening fruits (ripe are flattened, black, shiny berries) of American pokeweed (Phytolacca americana), a plant belonging to the pokeweed family, native to North America.
Macro photography of a cluster of pink pokeweed flowers, in a forest in the eastern Andean mountains of central Colombia, near the town of Villa de Leyva.
Ripening fruits (ripe are flattened, black, shiny berries) of American pokeweed (Phytolacca americana), a plant belonging to the pokeweed family, native to North America.
Plastic bag filled with fresh plucked green ambarella fruits.
Branch with leaves showing infection with Cercospora and ripe, purple fruit cluster of pokeweed (Phytolacca americana) isolated against a white background
The ornamental plant Phytolacca acinosa grows in the garden
Phytolacca decandra, indian pokeweed ripening black fruits on branches. Turkish name; Sekerciboyasi
Ripening fruits (ripe are flattened, black, shiny berries) of American pokeweed (Phytolacca americana), a plant belonging to the pokeweed family, native to North America.
American sweetgum tree (Liquidambar styraciflua), American sweetgum  ball
isolated Phytolacca floweror arborea turkish grapes
Pokeweeds (phytolacca americana)
 American pokeweed (Phytolacca americana) also known as pokeweed, poke sallet, pokeberry, dragonberries, pigeonberry weed, and inkberry is a poisonous plant.
berries of Phytolacca sp in forest
clusters black fruits of pokeweed - Phytolacca americana plant close up
American pokeweed plant, Phytolacca americana, in various stages of growth: Features flowers, and ripe and unripe berries on leafy red stalks.
Plastic bag filled with fresh plucked green ambarella fruits.
American sweetgum tree (Liquidambar styraciflua), American sweetgum  ball
American sweetgum tree (Liquidambar styraciflua), American sweetgum  ball
Pokeweed plant with fruits in summer
Fruits of an American pokeweed bush, Phytolacca americana
Pokeweed (Phytolacca) - foliage and fruit visible
Phytolacca (known as pokeweeds, pokebush, pokeberry, pokeroot or poke sallet) unripe berries and foliage closeup
Ripening fruits (ripe are flattened, black, shiny berries) of American pokeweed (Phytolacca americana), a plant belonging to the pokeweed family, native to North America.
Indian poke, pokeweed or pokeberry (phytolacca acinosa)
berries of Phytolacca sp in forest
berries of Phytolacca sp in forest
berries of Phytolacca sp in forest
Phytolacca americana plant in Florida nature, closeup
Phytolacca dioica plant on nursery for sell are cash crops. Ethnopharmacological information also revealed that Phytolacca dioica is used to heal skin wounds
Phytolacca dioica plant on nursery for sell are cash crops. Ethnopharmacological information also revealed that Phytolacca dioica is used to heal skin wounds
Plastic bag filled with fresh plucked green ambarella fruits.

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