Prunus spinosa

From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository

Jump to: navigation, search
Internationalization

Հայերեն: Մամուխ[1] · Català: Aranyoner[1] · Česky: Trnka obecná[1] · Dansk: Slåen[1] · Deutsch: Schlehdorn, Schlehe, Schwarzdorn[2] · English: Blackthorn[3] · Español: Endrino[1] · Français : Prunellier[1], Epine-noire, Prunier epineux[2] · Furlan: Sespâr[1] · Galego: Abruñeiro[1] · Hornjoserbsce: Dorničel[1] · Italiano: Prugno selvatico, Prugno spinoso[2] · Limburgs: Sjlièkreek[1] · Magyar: Kökény[1] · Nederlands: Sleedoorn[2] · 日本語: スピノサスモモ[1] · ‪Norsk (bokmål)‬: Slåpetorn[1] · Polski: Śliwa tarnina[1] · Português: Abrunheiro[2] · Русский: Тёрн[1] · Slovenščina: črni trn[2] · Suomi: Oratuomi[1] · Svenska: Slån[2] ·  · Українська: Терен[1] ·

Name
Prunus spinosa
Family
Rosaceae

[edit] Photos

[edit] Illustrations

[edit] References

  1. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Wikipedia interwiki links, retrieved on 2009-01-11
  2. a b c d e f g Prunus spinosa L. at FloVegSi, retrieved on 2009-01-11
  3. BSBI Database, retrieved on 2009-01-02
Personal tools