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1/500 f/8.0 4.8 mm ISO 100

Panasonic DMC-FZ28

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digital
Alberta
ubcbotanyphotooftheday
Calgary
color image
FZ28
Campion
Silene latifolia
Silene pratensis
annkelliott
Fish Creek Park
non-native
Sikome
Botany Photo of the Day
Panasonic DMC-FZ28
Feels Good
P1260317 FZ28
24th September 2009
Lumix
Canada
nature
flora
sky
image
flower
flowers
white
vertical
plant
blue sky
petals
photograph
buds
wildflower
point-and-shoot
botany
introduced
White Cockle


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Campion

Campion
This is the attractive flower of Campion, Silene pratensis. It's an introduced (non-native) plant and is a weed. We found it when we went for a walk in the Sikome area of Fish Creek Park yesterday morning.

"White cockle is thought to have been introduced to North America from Europe in the early nineteeth century through contaminated crop seeds. It is now widespread in the northern United States and southern Canada. However, only Washington lists Silene latifolia subsp. alba as a noxious weed. Like many introduced species, it can be found on roadsides and other disturbed areas, but it is also cultivated as an ornamental flower.

It is worth noting that Silene latifolia subsp. alba has been the subject of several taxonomic disputes and has consequently gained a number of scientific names, including Lychnis alba, Silene alba, and Silene pratensis. The name Silene probably comes from the Greek sialon, meaning "saliva". This term is also related to Bacchus' perpetually intoxicated tutor, Silenus, said to often be covered with foam -- much like the secretions found on many members of the pink family." This information was provided below my photo on the UBC (University of British Columbia) Botany Photo of the Day website.

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