BELLFLOWER
BELLFLOWER
Campanula is one of several genera of flowering plants in the family Campanulaceae with the common name Bellflower. It takes both its common and its scientific name from its bell-shaped flowers—campanula is Latin for "little bell".
Bellflower (genus Campanula) includes any of around 420 annual, perennial and biennial herbs that compose the genus Campanula (family Campanulaceae). Bellflowers have characteristically bell-shaped, usually blue flowers, and many are cultivated as garden ornamentals.
Most Bellflowers begin blooming in
July and keep on flowering until frost. The sweetness of its smell is similar to candle wax mixed with
amber and lipstick. The flowers are produced in panicles, sometimes
solitary, and have a five-lobed corolla, typically 2 to 5 cm or more
long, mostly blue to purple, sometimes also white or pink. Below the corolla, 5
leaf-like sepals form the calyx. Some species have a small additional
leaf-like growth termed an "appendage" between each sepal and the
presence or absence, relative size, and attitude of the appendage is often used
to distinguish between closely related species.
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