Each flower presents 5 petals, peppered with black dots around the edge and a prominent tuft of yellow tipped stamens. Titanji, in Medicinal Plant Research in Africa, 201317.3.1.18 Hypericaceae The African Saint John’s wort Hypericum lanceolatum subsp. This name is in version 1.1 of The Plant List, record kew-2858676, with some changes. Media in category "Hypericum perforatum" The following 200 files are in this category, out of 233 total. NRCS PLANT CODE COMMON NAMES TAXONOMY LIFE FORM FEDERAL LEGAL STATUS OTHER STATUS ©Barry A. Rice/The Nature Conservancy AUTHORSHIP AND CITATION: Zouhar, Kris. wide (2.5 cm), from early to late summer. Noteworthy Characteristics Hypericum perforatum, St. John’s wort (sometimes commonly called perforate St. John's wort, goatweed or Klamath weed) is an upright, many-branched, stoloniferous, yellow-flowered, herbaceous perennial (some say perennial weed) that is native to Europe, western Asia and northern Africa. wide (7.5 cm), from early summer to early fall. 1 Sources and Composition 1.1 Composition St. John's wort (SJW) refers to a plant by the botanical name of hypericum perforatum (of the family hypericaceae), with this species in particular being called Common St. John's wort or Perforate St. John's wort to distinguish it from other species in the plant genus of hypericum which all share the common name of St. John's wort. Borne on reddish, twiggy stems, they are produced in great quantities and blanket the plant. Hypericum perforatum (St John's wort) beyond depression: A therapeutic perspective for pain conditions J Ethnopharmacol . The Plant List Angiosperms Hypericaceae Hypericum Hypericum perforatum L. Hypericum Hypericum : It is a great landscape plant that attracts butterflies. Sometimes NameThatPlant.net currently features 3810 plants and 23,676 images. Hypericum The lesions of the nipple we describe as of three varieties: erosions, fissures of the apex, and fissures of uses the base. Saint-John’s-wort, (genus Hypericum), genus of nearly 500 species of herbs or low shrubs in the family Hypericaceae that are native to temperate and tropical areas. [4] Many Hypericum species are regarded as invasive species and noxious weeds. Hypericum /ˌhaɪˈpiːrɪkəm/ is a genus of flowering plants in the family Hypericaceae (formerly considered a subfamily of Clusiaceae). St. Johns Wort (a native of Europe) occurs commonly along roadsides and hedgerows, and this herb has one of the most glamorous histories in the plant kingdom.