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Encyclopedia > Poppies
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Papaver rhoeas
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Poppy at High Wood cemetery, France. Poppies are often seen as a symbol of World War I

A poppy is an annual, biennial, or perennial plant of the Family Papaveraceae, typically with showy flowers borne one per stem, native mainly to the Northern hemisphere and often grown for ornament, opium or food. 15–100 cm high, it yields a milky sap (latex) and bears large lobed or divided leaves and white, pink, orange, or red flowers, sometimes with a dark centre, with 4–6 petals around a whorl of stamens. The fruit is a capsule with pores through which the seeds are dispersed.


Genera in this family include:

The poppy of wartime remembrance is the red corn poppy, (Papaver rhoeas).


The pollen of the oriental poppy (Papaver orientale) is dark blue. The pollen of the field poppy or corn poppy (Papaver rhoeas) is dark blue to grey. Bees will use poppies as a pollen source.


The golden poppy, Eschscholtzia californica, is the state flower of California.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Erowid Papaver somniferum (Opium Poppy) Vault (230 words)
On the Trail of the Ancient Opium Poppy, by M. Merlin
Poppies: The Poppy Family in the Wild and Cultivation, by C. Grey-Wilson
Opium Poppy : Botany, Chemistry, and Pharmacology, by L.D. Kapoor (Ed.)
The Poppy (1177 words)
It was known to the Assyrians and the mythology of Greece.
Poppy seeds were thought to bring health and strength so Greek athletes were given mixtures of poppy seeds, honey, and wine.
The poppy was noticed during the Napoleonic Wars, as the mysterious flower that bloomed around the fresh graves of fallen soldiers.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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