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Longitude (deg): -2.4. Latitude (deg): 50.6. Longitude (deg/min): 2° 30' W. Latitude (deg/min): 50° 40' N. Vice county name: Dorset. Vice county no.: 9. Country: England. Stage: Plant. Identified by: Malcolm Storey. Comment: Reed beds. Category: standard photograph or close-up. Where photo was taken: In situ. Photographic equipment used: Canon EOS600D dSLR with Sigma 50mm 1:1 macro lens.
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Longitude (deg): -2.4. Latitude (deg): 50.6. Longitude (deg/min): 2° 30' W. Latitude (deg/min): 50° 40' N. Vice county name: Dorset. Vice county no.: 9. Country: England. Stage: Plant. Identified by: Malcolm Storey. Comment: Reed beds. Category: standard photograph or close-up. Where photo was taken: In situ. Photographic equipment used: Canon EOS600D dSLR with Sigma 50mm 1:1 macro lens.
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Longitude (deg): -2.4. Latitude (deg): 50.6. Longitude (deg/min): 2° 30' W. Latitude (deg/min): 50° 40' N. Vice county name: Dorset. Vice county no.: 9. Country: England. Stage: Plant. Identified by: Malcolm Storey. Comment: Reed beds. Category: standard photograph or close-up. Where photo was taken: In situ. Photographic equipment used: Canon EOS600D dSLR with Sigma 50mm 1:1 macro lens.
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Longitude (deg): -2.4. Latitude (deg): 50.6. Longitude (deg/min): 2° 30' W. Latitude (deg/min): 50° 40' N. Vice county name: Dorset. Vice county no.: 9. Country: England. Stage: Plant. Identified by: Malcolm Storey. Comment: Reed beds. Category: standard photograph or close-up. Where photo was taken: In situ. Photographic equipment used: Canon EOS600D dSLR with Sigma 50mm 1:1 macro lens.
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Longitude (deg): -0.7. Latitude (deg): 51.1. Longitude (deg/min): 0° 50' W. Latitude (deg/min): 51° 10' N. Vice county name: Surrey. Vice county no.: 17. Country: England. Stage: Plant. Identified by: Malcolm Storey. Category: standard photograph or close-up. Photographic equipment used: "35mm transparencies (on a variety of films, but Agfa CT18 in the 1960's to early 1980's followed by Fujichrome in the late 1980's.) Transparencies scanned with Minolta Dimage Scan Dual II AF-2820U transparency scanner.".
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June 7, 2012 looking mainly into Tooele County, Utah.While there is also a native strain, these plants represent the invasive strain. Both were previously recognized taxonomically as Phragmites australis* (which goes to show just how important genotypes are, i.e. the seeds from the same "species" are not simply the same) but the invasive strain as depicted here (which has bushier seed heads and darker leaves that are more persistent and lower exposed culms that are not reddish in fall) is subsp. australis (and the native subtaxon is subsp. americanus).
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Newnes, New South Wales, Australia
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2011-07-12 Vienna XXII. district (pond in Lobau national park, 150 msm Quadrant 7865/3).German name: Europa-SchilfOf course there are several other plant species to be seen here, first and foremost the leaves of Nuphar lutea, and then also the reflection of Populus alba trees. Further, if you look closely, Sagittaria sagittifolia, and also Hippuris vulgaris. Some others are not recognisable here (e. g. there's bound to be some Typha in there, but none that I could recognise in this shot).
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Newnes, New South Wales, Australia
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California, United States
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2011-01-06 Vienna XXII. district/ Lower Austria, district Gnserndorf (Lobau 155 m AMSL).Bayou - reed habitat, with Phragmites australis, Carex species (Seggenrieder), Typha latifolia, and of course the ubiquitous Salix and Populus trees.
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2010.01.16: Austria, Vienna XXII. district (New Danube island, 155 m).Dry shoots.Very common.German name: Schilf
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The ripen reed (Phragmites australis) panicles are ready to spread the seeds.
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California, United States
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Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
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Wilpinjong, New South Wales, Australia
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Pargas, Finland Proper, Finland
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Den Oever, North Holland, Netherlands
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Copenhagen, Hovedstaden, Denmark
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2009.01.06: Austria, Vienna XXII. district, 153 m AMSL, bayou, winter.Flowering from july till september (october).Up front you can see domes grown by clusters of Carex species (German Seggenrieder) - a very typical feature of Lobau marshland habitats.Very common.German names: Europa-Schilf, Gewhnliches Schilf, Schilfrohr, Rohr.
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Woods Hole, Massachusetts, United States