Wikibooks: Horticulture/Dianthus

Hortibox Pinks and Carnations Image = Dianthus plumarius0.jpg Binomial = Genus = Dianthus Family = Caryophyllaceae Variety = Type = Sun = Water = Soil = USDA Hardiness Zone = Sunset Zone = Propagation = Pruning season = Pruning tolerance = Forcing = Transplant = Pest issues = Disease issues = Bloom...

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Online Access:https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Horticulture/Dianthus
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spelling ftwikibooks:enwikibooks:19114:107574 2023-12-31T10:04:12+01:00 Wikibooks: Horticulture/Dianthus https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Horticulture/Dianthus eng eng Book ftwikibooks 2023-12-02T18:08:17Z Hortibox Pinks and Carnations Image = Dianthus plumarius0.jpg Binomial = Genus = Dianthus Family = Caryophyllaceae Variety = Type = Sun = Water = Soil = USDA Hardiness Zone = Sunset Zone = Propagation = Pruning season = Pruning tolerance = Forcing = Transplant = Pest issues = Disease issues = Bloom season = Fruit season = Sowing methods = Harvest = Storage = Weediness = Pollination = Insects Dianthus is a genus of about 300 species of flowering plants in the family Caryophyllaceae native mainly to Europe and Asia with a few species extending south to north Africa and one species ( D. repens ) in arctic North America. Common names include carnation ( D. caryophyllus ) pink ( D. plumarius and related species) and sweet william ( D. barbatus ). The name Dianthus is from the Greek words dios ( god ) and anthos ( flower ) and was cited by the Greek botanist Theophrastus. The color pink may actually be named after the flower. The origin of the flower name pink is unknown. =Description= The species are mostly perennial herbs a few are annual or biennial and some are low subshrubs with woody basal stems. Stems are swollen at the nodes and contain a clear sap. The leaves are opposite and simple with entire margins and petioles that wrap around the stem mostly linear and often strongly glaucous grey green to blue green. The flowers are solitary or in panicles with leafy bracts beneath and five petals typically with a frilled or notched margin. In almost all species they are pale to dark pink but at least one species ( D. knappii ) has yellow flowers with a purple centre. =Growing conditions= Moist well drained not overly rich soils full sun. =Species= [[./Dianthus alpinus/]] [[./Dianthus amurensis/]] [[./Dianthus anatolicus/]] [[./Dianthus arenarius/]] [[./Dianthus armeria/]] Deptford Pink [[./Dianthus barbatus/]] Sweet William [[./Dianthus biflorus/]] [[./Dianthus brevicaulis/]] [[./Dianthus callizonus/]] [[./Dianthus campestris/]] [[./Dianthus capitatus/]] [[./Dianthus carthusianorum/]] Carthusian Pink [[./Dianthus ... Book Arctic WikiBooks - Open-content textbooks
institution Open Polar
collection WikiBooks - Open-content textbooks
op_collection_id ftwikibooks
language English
description Hortibox Pinks and Carnations Image = Dianthus plumarius0.jpg Binomial = Genus = Dianthus Family = Caryophyllaceae Variety = Type = Sun = Water = Soil = USDA Hardiness Zone = Sunset Zone = Propagation = Pruning season = Pruning tolerance = Forcing = Transplant = Pest issues = Disease issues = Bloom season = Fruit season = Sowing methods = Harvest = Storage = Weediness = Pollination = Insects Dianthus is a genus of about 300 species of flowering plants in the family Caryophyllaceae native mainly to Europe and Asia with a few species extending south to north Africa and one species ( D. repens ) in arctic North America. Common names include carnation ( D. caryophyllus ) pink ( D. plumarius and related species) and sweet william ( D. barbatus ). The name Dianthus is from the Greek words dios ( god ) and anthos ( flower ) and was cited by the Greek botanist Theophrastus. The color pink may actually be named after the flower. The origin of the flower name pink is unknown. =Description= The species are mostly perennial herbs a few are annual or biennial and some are low subshrubs with woody basal stems. Stems are swollen at the nodes and contain a clear sap. The leaves are opposite and simple with entire margins and petioles that wrap around the stem mostly linear and often strongly glaucous grey green to blue green. The flowers are solitary or in panicles with leafy bracts beneath and five petals typically with a frilled or notched margin. In almost all species they are pale to dark pink but at least one species ( D. knappii ) has yellow flowers with a purple centre. =Growing conditions= Moist well drained not overly rich soils full sun. =Species= [[./Dianthus alpinus/]] [[./Dianthus amurensis/]] [[./Dianthus anatolicus/]] [[./Dianthus arenarius/]] [[./Dianthus armeria/]] Deptford Pink [[./Dianthus barbatus/]] Sweet William [[./Dianthus biflorus/]] [[./Dianthus brevicaulis/]] [[./Dianthus callizonus/]] [[./Dianthus campestris/]] [[./Dianthus capitatus/]] [[./Dianthus carthusianorum/]] Carthusian Pink [[./Dianthus ...
format Book
title Wikibooks: Horticulture/Dianthus
spellingShingle Wikibooks: Horticulture/Dianthus
title_short Wikibooks: Horticulture/Dianthus
title_full Wikibooks: Horticulture/Dianthus
title_fullStr Wikibooks: Horticulture/Dianthus
title_full_unstemmed Wikibooks: Horticulture/Dianthus
title_sort wikibooks: horticulture/dianthus
url https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Horticulture/Dianthus
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
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