Garden marguerite

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Garden_marguerite

Garden marguerites, also known as marguerite daisies, are cultivars of plants in the subtribe Glebionidinae of the family Asteraceae, the great majority being hybrids created in cultivation. One of the genera belonging to the subtribe, Argyranthemum, was introduced into cultivation from the Canary Islands in the 18th century, and modern cultivars are mostly sold and grown under the genus name Argyranthemum or the species name Argyranthemum frutescens, although many are actually intergeneric hybrids. The first such hybrids involved species now placed in the genus Glebionis, but other crosses within the subtribe are known. Breeding has aimed at introducing flower heads in varied colours and shapes while retaining the shrubby habit of Argyranthemum. Garden marguerites are used as summer beddi rdf:langString
rdf:langString Garden marguerite
xsd:integer 63180590
xsd:integer 1072019866
rdf:langString font-size:1.15em; min-width:75%; line-height:1.25em; padding-top:0.3em;
rdf:langString Garden marguerites
rdf:langString Pink cultivar
rdf:langString Garden marguerites
rdf:langString Mostly artificial hybrids involving Argyranthemum, including intergeneric crosses
rdf:langString Family:
rdf:langString Informal group:
rdf:langString Origin:
rdf:langString Subfamily:
rdf:langString Subtribe:
rdf:langString Tribe:
rdf:langString biota
rdf:langString font-size:1.15em; font-weight:normal; padding-top:0.3em; line-height:1.25em; padding-right:0.5em;
rdf:langString Garden marguerites, also known as marguerite daisies, are cultivars of plants in the subtribe Glebionidinae of the family Asteraceae, the great majority being hybrids created in cultivation. One of the genera belonging to the subtribe, Argyranthemum, was introduced into cultivation from the Canary Islands in the 18th century, and modern cultivars are mostly sold and grown under the genus name Argyranthemum or the species name Argyranthemum frutescens, although many are actually intergeneric hybrids. The first such hybrids involved species now placed in the genus Glebionis, but other crosses within the subtribe are known. Breeding has aimed at introducing flower heads in varied colours and shapes while retaining the shrubby habit of Argyranthemum. Garden marguerites are used as summer bedding or grown in containers. Most are only half-hardy. They can be trained into shapes such as pyramids or grown as standards.
rdf:langString cultivar
rdf:langString background:palegreen; line-height:1.5em;
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 18301

data from the linked data cloud