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"Many of you are my witnesses that I loved Stachys.
The type species for the genus is Stachys sylvatica.
This study also found six other genera to be embedded within Stachys as it is currently circumscribed.
I loved the child Stachys gave me."
Stachys) is a small kibbutz in northern Israel.
The generic name stachys derives from the Greek meaning 'spike' because of the way the flowers are arranged.
The distinction between Stachys and other genera is unclear and has varied from one author to another.
The word stachys comes from the Greek, meaning "an ear of grain," and refers to the fact that the inflorescence is often a spike.
Further studies will be needed before Stachys, Sideritis, and their closest relatives can be revised.
The larvae feed on Stachys and Mint.
Once lambs' ears (Stachys Lanata) were used to heal cuts and bruises.
Salute Urbane, our helper in Christ, and Stachys my beloved.
Stachys was named by Linnaeus in Species Plantarum in 1753.
In Europe, Stachys can be found growing in wastelands, grasslands and woodland edges.
The larvae attack and damage the rhyzomes of Stachys species, which will spoil easily and have to be eliminated before being sold.
Relatives include lamium, monarda, nepeta, ajuga and stachys.
In 2002, a molecular phylogenetic study found Sideritis and five other genera to be embedded in Stachys.
The genus is closely related to the genera Nepeta, Stachys and Prunella.
Other plants with stolons below the soil surface include many grasses, Ajuga, Mentha, and Stachys.
The genus name comes from Greek schistos ("cleft") and stachys ("spike"), referring to the spacing of spikelets.
Only the larvae of the second generation cause economically important damage to cultivated Stachys, those of the early generation tunnel in the roots and the runners.
Hyperoside has been isolated from Drosera rotundifolia, from the Lamiaceae Stachys sp.
The larvae feed on various herbaceous plants, such as Stachys, Eupatorium cannabinum and Fragaria vesca.
The whole experience of exile is mentioned only by Ovid himself, except a few words by Pliny the Elder and Stachys.
It has also been asserted that that evidence points to the seeds of the Annual Woundwort (Stachys annua) being the causal agent.