Flash fired, return not detected, red-eye reduction
Focal length
55.0mm
Exposure time
1/200s
Aperture
36.0
Focus Distance
Metering Mode
$meteringMode
Camera make
NIKON CORPORATION
Camera model
NIKON D5300
Sensor type
ative
Photo:Ashutosh Sharma
Common name: Bracted Bugleweed • Hindi: नीलकंठी Neelkanthi • Nepali: निल फल Nil Phal
Botanical name:Ajuga integrifoliaFamily:Lamiaceae (Mint family) Synonyms: Ajuga bracteosa, Ajuga alba
Bracted Bugleweed is a perennial much-branched spreading
sometimes rhizomatous herb, 5-20 cm tall, sometimes rooting at the lower
nodes. Flowers are white to pale pink, lilac-blue, blue, mauve to violet,
0.6-1.3 cm long; tube 4-9 mm long, slightly curved and widened at the base,
and splitting into 4 flaps as the fruit matures, with a mat of hairs
near the base in a thick line just above nutlets; posterior lip with
lobe notched; anterior lip up to 4 mm long; lobes with scattered hairs
Stamens protruding. Calyx is sometimes weakly 2-lipped, 4-6.5
mm long; sepals lanceshaped to deltoid, velvet-hairy, curving inwards
at maturity. Inflorescences are up to 25 cm long, lax at the
base, becoming congested towards the tip; verticils with 8–15 flowers;
bracts lanceshaped, partially sawtoothed to entire; flower-stalks 0–0.5
mm long ase of stem may be coloured pinkish blue.
Stems are erect or creeping at base then rising up, slightly
velvet-hairy at the base, becoming denser towards the inflorescence with
long retrorse white hairs. Leaves are spreading, nearly
stalkless to shortly stalked; blades inverted-lanceshaped to elliptic,
3.5-11 x 0.5-4 cm, margin sawtoothed towards the tip and more or less
entire towards the base, with 2–6 teeth per side, to rounded toothed,
tip pointed to rounded, base wedge-shaped, sparingly velvet-hairy to
velvet-hairy with antrorse hairs, upper leaf surface greyish green,
slightly velvet-hairy and veins mostly undetectable, the lower surface
more velvet-hairy and lighter green than upper surface; veins visible;
leaves and leaf-stalks near the base of the stem may be tinged pinkish;
leaf-stalk 0-5 mm long. Nutlets are dark brown, obovoid, 2–3 mm long,
netveinedly ridged, hairless Bracted Bugleweed is
found in E. Afghanistan, Pakistan, Kashmir, Himalayas to Bhutan, Burma,
China, Malaysia, at altitudes of 1000-4000 m. Flowering: March-December.
Identification credit: Ashutosh Sharma
Photographed in Hamirpur, Himachal Pradesh & Rajouri, J&K.
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The flower labeled Bracted Bugleweed is ...