Heliotropium hirsutissimum Grauer is a plant in the Heliotropiaceae family, order Boraginales, kingdom Plantae. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Heliotropium hirsutissimum Grauer (Heliotropium hirsutissimum Grauer)
🌿 Plantae

Heliotropium hirsutissimum Grauer

Heliotropium hirsutissimum Grauer

Heliotropium hirsutissimum, the hairy heliotrope, is a hairy plant native to parts of the Eastern Mediterranean and North Africa.

Genus
Heliotropium
Order
Boraginales
Class
Magnoliopsida
⚠️ Toxicity Note

Insufficient toxicity evidence; avoid direct contact and ingestion.

About Heliotropium hirsutissimum Grauer

This plant grows on field edges, alongside roads and tracks, and on waste ground. It typically has long, fine, projecting hairs and greyish-looking leaves, which gives it the common name 'hairy heliotrope'. When it matures, its flowering axes grow a great deal longer, becoming long and curved; large, fully grown plants take on a rather irregular, chaotic overall appearance. Its flowers have a distinct feature: prominent hairy bulges at the mouth of their yellow throat. The yellow throat turns pinkish as it matures, before the flower withers, as documented in iNaturalist photographs. This species is native to Cyprus, the East Aegean Islands, Egypt, Greece, Crete, Lebanon-Syria, Libya, Palestine, Turkey (Türkiye), and Turkey-in-Europe.

Photo: (c) Konstantinos Kalaentzis, all rights reserved, uploaded by Konstantinos Kalaentzis

Taxonomy

Plantae Tracheophyta Magnoliopsida Boraginales Heliotropiaceae Heliotropium

More from Heliotropiaceae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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