azalea$6344$ - significado y definición. Qué es azalea$6344$
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Qué (quién) es azalea$6344$ - definición

SPECIES OF PLANT
Yellow Azalea; Yellow azalea; Honeysuckle Azalea; Honeysuckle azalea; Azalea pontica

Azalea, Oregon         
HUMAN SETTLEMENT IN OREGON, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Azalea, Or
Azalea (formerly Starveout, Starve Out and Booth) is an unincorporated community in Douglas County, Oregon, United States, about 10 miles Northeast of Glendale on Interstate 5, at an elevation of 1,657 feet.
Azalea         
  • [[New Jersey]]
  • [[Korea]]
  • alt=Flowers
  • Azalea Festival at [[Nezu Shrine]]
  • Fifty-year-old bush
  • alt=A flower of the 'George Taber' cultivar
  • alt=Thirty-year-old flowering azalea bush, Maryland, USA
CERTAIN SPECIES FLOWERING SHRUBS IN THE GENUS RHODODENDRON OF THE HEATH FAMILY (ERICACEAE), FORMERLY PLACED IN THE GENUS AZALEA
Azaleas; Azaléia; Azalea species; Culture of azalea; Azaleia; AZALEA; Azalea bush
Azaleas are flowering shrubs in the genus Rhododendron, particularly the former sections Tsutsusi (evergreen) and Pentanthera (deciduous). Azaleas bloom in the spring (April and May in the temperate Northern Hemisphere, and October and November in the Southern Hemisphere), their flowers often lasting several weeks.
Kalmia procumbens         
Kalmia procumbens, commonly known as alpine azalea or trailing azalea, is a dwarf shrub of high mountain regions of the Northern Hemisphere that usually grows no more than tall. Originally named by Linnaeus as Azalea procumbens, it is also named after French botanist L.

Wikipedia

Rhododendron luteum

Rhododendron luteum, the yellow azalea or honeysuckle azalea, is a species of flowering plant in the heath family Ericaceae, native to southeastern Europe and southwest Asia. In Europe, it occurs from southern Poland and Austria, south through the Balkans, and east to southern Russia; and in Asia, east to the Caucasus.

It is a shrub growing 3–4 m (9.8–13.1 ft). The leaves are deciduous, 5–10 cm long and 2–4 cm broad. The flowers are 3–4 cm in diameter, bright yellow, and strongly perfumed, produced in trusses of 5-25 together. The fruit is a dry capsule 15–25 mm long, containing numerous small seeds.

The nectar is toxic, containing the neurotoxin grayanotoxin; records of poisoning of people eating the honey date to the 4th century BC in Classical Greece.