Heliotropium hirsutissimum: Difference between revisions

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==Distribution==

==Distribution==

It is native to Cyprus, East Aegean Is., Egypt, Greece, Crete, Lebanon-Syria, Libya, Palestine, Türkiye, Türkiye-in-Europe. <ref name=”PoWo”/>

It is native to Cyprus, East Aegean Is., Egypt, Greece, Crete, Lebanon-Syria, Libya, Palestine, Türkiye, Türkiye-in-Europe. <ref name=”PoWo”/>

==References==

==References==


Revision as of 12:16, 25 November 2025

Species of plant in the borage family

Heliotropium hirsutissimum, the hairy heliotrope, is a species of flowering plant in the family Boraginaceae, native to the eastern Mediterranean.[1] (Grauer is listed as the authority by some sources.[2])

It contains a number of pyrrolizidine alkaloids.[3]

Description

The plant grows on edges of fields, roads and tracks, and waste ground. It generally has long fine projecting hairs and greyish looking leaves, which inspires its name ‘hairy heliotrope’, and on maturing the flowering axes extend greatly, becoming long and curvy, the whole plant when large taking on a rather chaotic look. Its flowers are characterised by prominent hairy bulges at the mouth of their yellow throat, the yellow maturing pinkish before withering (iNaturalist photographs). [4]

Distribution

It is native to Cyprus, East Aegean Is., Egypt, Greece, Crete, Lebanon-Syria, Libya, Palestine, Türkiye (Turkey), Türkiye-in-Europe. [1]

References

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