Oxeye daisy
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Oxeye Daisy | ||||||||||||||
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Missing image Leucanthemum-vulgare01.jpg Oxeye Daisy A close-up of the flowers | ||||||||||||||
Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||
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The Oxeye Daisy (Leucanthemum vulgare) is a widespread wildflower in Europe and the temperate regions of Asia. It was introduced in parts of North America, Australia and New Zealand.
It is one of a number of plants, such as the English Daisy, to be called Daisy. It is also sometimes called moon daisy or dog daisy.
It is a perennial prostrate herb with small flower head (not larger than 5 cm) that consists of about 20 white ray flowers and numerous yellow disc flowers, growing on the end of the stem. The stem is mostly unbranched and sprouts laterally from a creeping rootstock.
The leaves are darkgreen on both sides. The basal and middle leaves are petiolate, obovate to spoon-shaped, and serrate to dentate. The upper leaves are shorter, sessile and borne along the stem.
It produces an abundant number of flat seeds without pappus. It spreads also vegetatively by rooting underground stems.
The Oxeye Daisy is a typical meadow flower, growing in a variety of plant communities such as dry fields, meadows, but also under scrubs, open-canopy forests and waste places. It thrives in a wide range of conditions and prefers heavy and damp soils. It is a common weed displacing native plant species. It is difficult to control or eradicate, since a new plant can regenerate from rhizome fragments.
fr:Marguerite commune