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Musky Stork's Bill

Erodium moschatum (L.) L'Her.

Distribution in Egypt

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Mediterranean region.

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Global Distribution

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Mediterranean region, extending to Atlantic Islands and along Atlantic coasts to Britain and Ireland, Ethiopia.

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Habitat

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Cultivated ground.

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Life Expectancy

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Annual.

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Associations

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In Great Britain and/or Ireland:
Foodplant / parasite
sporangium of Peronospora erodii parasitises live Erodium moschatum

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Comprehensive Description

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Erodium moschatum (Burm. f.) L'Her. ; Ait. Hort Kew. 2 : 414. 1789.
Geranium moschatum Burm. f. Sp. Geran. 29. 1759.
Leaves 10-25 cm. long or sometimes shorter ; blades pinnately divided, the segments ovate or oblong-ovate, 1-3 cm. long, toothed or pinnately cleft, the lobes toothed ; peduncles and pedicels glandular-pubescent ; sepals with short subulate tips destitute of bristle-like appendages, the outer 6-7 mm. long, the bodies oblong or elliptic-oblong; petals slightly longer than the sepals ; anther-bearing filaments 2-toothed ; style-column 3.5-4.5 cm. long, puberulent.
Type locality : Europe.
Distribution : California and Lower California, and localhy in the eastern United States.
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bibliographic citation
John Kunkel Small, Lenda Tracy Hanks, Nathaniel Lord Britton. 1907. GERANIALES, GERANIACEAE, OXALIDACEAE, LINACEAE, ERYTHROXYLACEAE. North American flora. vol 25(1). New York Botanical Garden, New York, NY
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Erodium moschatum

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Erodium moschatum - MHNT

Erodium moschatum is a species of flowering plant in the geranium family known by the common names musk stork's-bill[1] and whitestem filaree. This is a weedy annual or biennial herb which is native to much of Eurasia and North Africa but can be found on most continents where it is an introduced species. The young plant starts with a flat rosette of compound leaves, each leaf up to 15 centimeters long with many oval-shaped highly lobed and toothed leaflets along a central vein which is hairy, white, and stemlike. The plant grows to a maximum of about half a meter in height with plentiful fuzzy green foliage. The small flowers have five sepals behind five purple or lavender petals, each petal just over a centimeter long. The filaree fruit has a small, glandular body with a long green style up to 4 centimeters in length.

Like Erodium cicutarium, the species is edible.[2]

References

  1. ^ BSBI List 2007 (xls). Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland. Archived from the original (xls) on 2015-06-26. Retrieved 2014-10-17.
  2. ^ Nyerges, Christopher (2016). Foraging Wild Edible Plants of North America: More than 150 Delicious Recipes Using Nature's Edibles. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 81. ISBN 978-1-4930-1499-6.

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Erodium moschatum: Brief Summary

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Erodium moschatum - MHNT

Erodium moschatum is a species of flowering plant in the geranium family known by the common names musk stork's-bill and whitestem filaree. This is a weedy annual or biennial herb which is native to much of Eurasia and North Africa but can be found on most continents where it is an introduced species. The young plant starts with a flat rosette of compound leaves, each leaf up to 15 centimeters long with many oval-shaped highly lobed and toothed leaflets along a central vein which is hairy, white, and stemlike. The plant grows to a maximum of about half a meter in height with plentiful fuzzy green foliage. The small flowers have five sepals behind five purple or lavender petals, each petal just over a centimeter long. The filaree fruit has a small, glandular body with a long green style up to 4 centimeters in length.

Like Erodium cicutarium, the species is edible.

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