Leighton Photography & Imaging

  • Home
  • Website
  • About
  • Portfolio
  • Contact
  • Newsletter
  • How to Download
  • Galleries
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x
search results
Image 18 of 32
Prev Next
Less

Magenta Indian Paintbrush

Add to Cart
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Like other members of the Indian paintbrush family, these vibrant, high elevation-loving wildflowers are hemisitic. They feed at least is some part on the roots of neighboring grasses and wildflowers. If you look closely, the bright magenta part isn't the flower, but are colored leaves called bracts. The actual flowers are the tiny yellowish-green tubes sticking out of the bracts. These were photographed in the subalpine heights on Washington's Mount Rainier.

Copyright
© 2011
Image Size
2581x3886 / 7.1MB
Keywords
Angiosperms, Asterids, C. parviflora, Castilleja, Castilleja parviflora, Castilleja parviflora var. oreopola, Eudicots, Henry Indian paintbrush, Indian paintbrush, Lamiales, Mount Rainier, National Park, Orobanchaceae, Plantae, Washington, alpine, background, beautiful, beauty, bloom, blooming, blooms, blossom, blossoms, botany, bud, color, countryside, dicot, environment, field, figwort, flora, flower, flowers, forb, fresh, fushia, green, habitat, herb, hot pink, inland, landscape, magenta, magenta Indian paintbrush, meadow, mountain Indian paintbrush, native, natural, nature, paintbrush, perennia, pink, plant, plants, purple, small-flowered Indian paintbrush, subalpine, subshrub, summer, wild, wilderness, wildflowers
Contained in galleries
Pink Wildflowers, Orobanchaceae (Indian Paintbrushes and Broomrapes)
Like other members of the Indian paintbrush family, these vibrant, high elevation-loving wildflowers are hemisitic. They feed at least is some part on the roots of neighboring grasses and wildflowers. If you look closely, the bright magenta part isn't the flower, but are colored leaves called bracts. The actual flowers are the tiny yellowish-green tubes sticking out of the bracts. These were photographed in the subalpine heights on Washington's Mount Rainier.