Pasque flower

Pulsatilla vulgaris

"Pulsatilla vulgaris" belongs to the buttercup family, native to western, central and southern Europe. It grows to 15–30 cm high and when it is fruit-bearing up to 40 cm. The roots go deep into the soil. The finely-dissected leaves are arranged in a rosette and appear with the bell-shaped flower in early spring.
Pasque flower - Pulsatilla vulgaris KU Leuven botanical garden, Heverlee.  Belgium,Geotagged,Pasque flower,Pulsatilla vulgaris,Spring

Distribution

It grows in sparsely wooded pine forests or meadows, often on a sunny sloping side with calcium-rich soil. It is also the county flower of the English counties of Cambridgeshire and Hertfordshire. A large colony occurs on publicly accessible land in the Cotswolds, at the Gloucestershire Wildlife Trust's Gloucestershire Pasqueflower Reserve.

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Status: Unknown
EX EW CR EN VU NT LC
Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionAngiosperms
ClassEudicots
OrderRanunculales
FamilyRanunculaceae
GenusPulsatilla
Species