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Top 20 Most Common Plants in Zarand

In Zarand, you can find Common chicory, Animated oat, Pistachio, Peace lily, Common bean, and more! There are 20 types of plants in total. Be sure to look out for these common plants when you’re walking on the streets, in parks, or public gardens.

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Most Common Plants
Common chicory
1. Common chicory
Common chicory is used in a variety of culinary applications around the world, most commonly with coffee. It is occasionally also added during the beer-brewing process to inject a coffee-like flavor. The leaves can be boiled or eaten raw in salad or with pasta. Common chicory is also a simple livestock fodder. In European folklore, the small blue flowers could be used to magically open locked doors.
Animated oat
2. Animated oat
Animated oat is a grass historically utilised as a pasture plant. However, it is now considered an aggressive invasive species in cultivated and disturbed lands in many regions across the globe. Animated oat mimics another crop, the Avena oat, and produces an abundance of seeds that get mixed with the harvested product.
Pistachio
3. Pistachio
Pistachio has edible seeds. It has been used as a food source for decades, first cultivated in the Bronze age in Central Asia. It was not commercially promoted until 1929. It's a small European tree that may be easily confused with others in its genus, differentiated by location and seeds.
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Peace lily
4. Peace lily
The peace lily gets its scientific name Spathiphyllum wallisii from a combination of the two Greek words ‘spath’ and ‘phyl’, which means spoon and leaves, respectively. The large graceful white spathe of the peace lily resembles a white flag, which is an international symbol of truce or peace.
Common bean
5. Common bean
Common bean is one of the most widely produced cash crops in the world, with 23.6 million tons grown in 2016. China is the largest producer of common bean, accounting for 79% of the market share. While common bean is known as a staple food source, the leaves can be used to trap bedbugs and the beans are widely used in a type of fortune-telling called "pharmancy".
Arrowhead plant
6. Arrowhead plant
Arrowhead plant (Syngonium podophyllum) is a beautiful foliage plant, one of the most popular species of the Araceae family. Due to its air purifying qualities and good looks, arrowhead plant is often cultivated as a houseplant. Every part of this plant is toxic, so it's best to keep it away from kids and pets.
African violet
7. African violet
As its name indicates, the african violet originated in the coastal region of Tanzania, Africa. It is a well-loved plant in many households, and its compact shape and beautiful blue, pink, purple or white flowers add cheer to any room. The african violet is known to bloom nearly year-round but can be sensitive to cold, so keep at 55 degrees or above.
Golden dewdrops
8. Golden dewdrops
Golden dewdrops (Duranta erecta) is an ornamental sprawling shrub commonly found in subtropical and tropical gardens all over the world. Its gentle purple blossoms are often visited by butterflies and hummingbirds. Golden dewdrops is considered a weed in Australia, South Africa and certain parts of East Asia.
Wild carrot
9. Wild carrot
The wild carrot is a common flowering plant with light, delicate flowers. Originally native to Europe and Asia, it has also spread to North America and Australia. Studies of historical paintings suggest that the wild carrot was cultivated in Turkey, Spain, and North Africa for centuries.
Alder buckthorn
10. Alder buckthorn
Alder buckthorn (Frangula alnus) is a deciduous shrub native to Europe, Africa, and Asia. Alder buckthorn grows in wet soils in open woodlands and bogs. Commercially, it has been used in the manufacture of gunpowder. Alder buckthorn is considered an invasive species in the United States.
Paperflower
11. Paperflower
The paperflower is commonly used as an outdoor ornamental plant and thrives in warm climates. The genus Bougainvillea glabra is the official flower of many places, including Guam, Pingtung, Ipoh, Tagbilaran, San Clemente, Guangzhou, and Naha.
Dwarf umbrella tree
12. Dwarf umbrella tree
Dwarf umbrella tree (*Schefflera arboricola*) is an evergreen, multi-stemmed shrub native to China. It is commonly grown as a houseplant or a garden plant in milder climates for its decorative palmate compound leaves. The leaves contain calcium oxalates, which can damage internal organs when ingested. It shouldn't be confused with the Australian umbrella tree, *Schefflera actinophylla*.
Bitter vetch
13. Bitter vetch
Bitter vetch is an ancient grain that is still fed to ruminant cattle and sheep today. Bitter vetch grows on disturbed ground; however, it is widely admired for its easy cultivation and harvesting and ability to grow in the shallowest of soils, making it a staple crop in Turkey, Spain, and Morocco.
Urn plant
14. Urn plant
Urn plant (Aechmea fasciata) is a species of flowering bromeliad also known as a silver vase. Urn plant is somewhat difficult to grow, requiring shade and well-drained soil. It's a toxic plant that can irritate human skin. Insects are sometimes attracted to water that pools in the leaves of the plant.
Mediterranean cypress
15. Mediterranean cypress
Mediterranean cypress (Cupressus sempervirens) is a medium-sized coniferous evergreen tree that has been cultivated outside its native region as an ornamental tree for millennia. Mediterranean cypress is native to the eastern Mediterranean region. It is cultivated in similar climates to the Meditteranean region, like California, South Africa, and Australia. This species is susceptible to dieback disease. The oldest living mediterranean cypress is estimated to be 4,000 years old and resides in famous ancient gardens in Iran.
Wheat
16. Wheat
Wheat (Triticum aestivum) is a grass species that is commercially grown for cereal grain. Approximately 95% of all wheat grown in the world is this species, Triticum aestivum. It has proved well adapted to modern industrial baking, and has replaced many of the other wheat, barley, and rye species.
Crassula volkensii
17. Crassula volkensii
Crassula volkensii (*Crassula* *volkensii*) is a hardy succulent shrub that is known to be vulnerable to fungi and pests when cultivated. Like many other succulents, crassula volkensii is vulnerable to root rot if its soil is not allowed to dry out completely in between waterings, which should be spaced out adequately. This species originates in Kenya and Tanzania.
Red raspberry
18. Red raspberry
Red raspberry is a perennial forest shrub with elongated, thorny stems. The stems grow rapidly during their first year and bloom in their second year. The plant produces small, aggregate fruit that has a distinct aroma and a sweet-and-sour taste. Rubus idaeus cultivars are hybrids between this red raspberry and the American species R. Strigosus.
Little bur clover
19. Little bur clover
The dwarf snail clover is a herbaceous plant, usually annual. The more or less silky hairy stem is simple or branched from the bottom, lying down, ascending or upright, obtuse and often only 25 cm long; Occasionally, some specimens reach a length of 50 centimeters.
Common pear
20. Common pear
The common pear is a tree whose fruit is widely popular and grown all over the world. One way this fruit is unique is that it contains hard particles (called stone cells) within in its flesh that provides a gritty feel when eating. Common pear, when properly cared for, can have a life span of 50-75 years.
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