The scientific or taxonomic name would be Hymenocallisspp.
Here is the taxonomy for the daffodil:Domain: Eukaryotae (cells with nuclear membrane and multiple chromosomes)Kingdom: PlantaeSubkingdom: Viridaeplantae (green plants)Infrakingdom: Streptophyta (land plants)Division: Tracheophyta (vascular plants)Subdivision: Spermatophytina (seed plants)Infradivision: Angiospermae (flowering plants)Class: MagnoliopsidaSuperorder: Lilanae (monocots)Order: Asparagales (bulb plant)Family: Amaryllidaceae (fancy, big flower)Genus: NarcissusSpecies: N. pseudonarcissus L. (common daffodil)
The scientific name for a double daffodil is Narcissus.
The national flower of Wales is the daffodil. It is not poisonous.
Latin name: Narcissus. Common name: Daffodil. Narcissus is the scientific name .
no. this is because daffodils are not poisonous. chocolate might kill cats though
No, dahlias are not poisonous to goats. The plant is poisonous to dogs and cats though. Goats can't eat photosensitizing plants.
The genus name for the daffodil is Narcissus. There are many different species of the flower, which is in the Amaryllidaceae (flowering, perennial bulb) family.
Let's look at the scientific classification to find out if the daffodil is a flowering plant:Kindom; PlantaeDivision: Angiosperms (aka Magnoliophyta) are the flowering, seed-producing plantsGroup: Monocots (one cotyledon)Order: Asparagales (bulbs)Family: Amaryllidaceae (Herbaceous plant with showy, lily-like flowers)Subfamily: AmaryllidaceaeGenus: NarcissusSince a daffodil is of the division Angiosperm, then YES it is a flowering plant. This is verified farther down with the family Amaryllidaceae which have showy, lily-like flowers.
Roses belong to the genus Rosa in the family Rosaceae, while daffodils belong to the genus Narcissus in the family Amaryllidaceae.
The Lent Lily is a daffodil type flower with the scientific name of Narcissus pseudonarcissus.
Short answer: NO thorns. A thorn is a protective plant tissue modification. Thorny plants create barriers, or have super-showy flowers, and they can protect birds from predators. The daffodil does NOT need this defense mechanism as the daffodil is toxic (poisonous) to most animals, and won't be eaten.
The exact numbers depend on which university library and the age of the information you access, but generally there are between 40 and 200 different daffodil species and over 25,000 registered cultivars divided among the 13 divisions in the daffodil classification system.The exact numbers depend on which university library and the age of the information you access, but generally there are between 40 and 200 different daffodil species and over 25,000 registered cultivars divided among the 13 divisions in the daffodil classification system.