Poppy
A
poppy is a annual, biennial, or perennial
plant of the
Family Papaveraceae, typically with showy flowers borne one
per stem, native mainly to the Northern
hemisphere
and often grown for ornament,
opium
or
food. 15-100
cm high, it yields a milky
sap
(
latex)
and bears large lobed or divided leaves and white, pink, orange,
or red flowers, sometimes with a dark centre, with 4-6 petals
around a whorl of stamens. The fruit is a
capsule
with pores through which the seeds are dispersed.
Genera in this family include:
- Meconopsis (Himalayan poppy, Welsh poppy, and
relatives)
- Papaver (Iceland poppy, Oriental poppy, Opium
poppy, corn
poppy and about 120 other species)
- Romneya (Matilija poppy and relatives)
- Eschscholzia ( California poppy and relatives)
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