Larkspur
Species, Toxicity, & Facts
larkspur, (genus Delphinium), genus of about 365 species of herbaceous plants of the buttercup family (Ranunculaceae), many of which are grown for the floral industry and as ornamentals for their showy flower stalks. The plants are found throughout the Northern Hemisphere and in certain montane areas of Africa. All members of the genus are considered poisonous to humans and livestock.
Baker's larkspur
Annual larkspurs (sometimes separated as the genus Consolida) include the common rocket larkspur (Delphinium ajacis or C. ajacis) and its varieties, which grow up to 60 cm (2 feet) tall and have bright blue, pink, or white flowers on branching stalks. Perennial larkspurs—which tend toward blue flowers but vary to pink, white, red, and yellow—include a puzzling assemblage of species, among them D. cashmerianum and D. grandiflorum, from 30 to 100 cm (about 1 to 3 feet) tall, and D. elatum, up to 180 cm (6 feet) tall. Many hybrids have arisen, notably the cultivars ‘Belladonna’ and ‘Bellamosa,’ which bear large blue to violet flowers on tall branched spires.
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