Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 34 images found }

Loading ()...

  • tre_skog_s-3.jpg
  • bregner_fern-6.jpg
  • bregner_fern-2.jpg
  • bregner_fern-6.jpg
  • bregner_fern-4.jpg
  • bregner_fern.jpg
  • bregner_fern-2.jpg
  • bregner_fern-3.jpg
  • tre_skog_s-5.jpg
  • tre_skog_s.jpg
  • bregner_fern-5.jpg
  • bregner_fern-4.jpg
  • bregner_fern-5.jpg
  • tre_skog_s-4.jpg
  • tre_skog_s-2.jpg
  • kantkonvall_polygonatum.jpg
  • Aquilegia vulgaris (European columbine, common columbine, granny's nightcap, granny's bonnet) is a species of columbine native to Europe. It is a flowering herbaceous perennial plant growing to 1.2 m tall, with branched, thinly hairy stems. The leaves are biternate; each leaf has three groups of three leaflets. The flowers, in various shades of purple, blue, pink and white, are pendent or horizontal with hooked spurs, and appear in early summer. The Latin specific epithet vulgaris means “common”. The plant is a member of the poisonous Ranunculus family and all parts of the plant, including the seeds, are poisonous if ingested. The acute toxicity test in mice showed that ethanol extract and the main flavonoid compound isocytisoside from the leaves and stems of Aquilegia vulgaris can be classified as nontoxic since a dose of 3000 mg/kg did not cause mortality in mice.  In traditional herbalism columbine was considered sacred to Venus; carrying a posy of it was said to arouse the affections of a loved one. Nicholas Culpeper recommended the seeds taken in wine to speed the process of childbirth. In modern herbal medicine it is used as an astringent and diuretic. (W)
    akeleier_columbine_aquilegia-2.jpg
  • Aquilegia vulgaris (European columbine, common columbine, granny's nightcap, granny's bonnet) is a species of columbine native to Europe. It is a flowering herbaceous perennial plant growing to 1.2 m tall, with branched, thinly hairy stems. The leaves are biternate; each leaf has three groups of three leaflets. The flowers, in various shades of purple, blue, pink and white, are pendent or horizontal with hooked spurs, and appear in early summer. The Latin specific epithet vulgaris means “common”. The plant is a member of the poisonous Ranunculus family and all parts of the plant, including the seeds, are poisonous if ingested. The acute toxicity test in mice showed that ethanol extract and the main flavonoid compound isocytisoside from the leaves and stems of Aquilegia vulgaris can be classified as nontoxic since a dose of 3000 mg/kg did not cause mortality in mice.  In traditional herbalism columbine was considered sacred to Venus; carrying a posy of it was said to arouse the affections of a loved one. Nicholas Culpeper recommended the seeds taken in wine to speed the process of childbirth. In modern herbal medicine it is used as an astringent and diuretic. (W)
    akeleier_columbine_aquilegia-9.jpg
  • Aquilegia vulgaris (European columbine, common columbine, granny's nightcap, granny's bonnet) is a species of columbine native to Europe. It is a flowering herbaceous perennial plant growing to 1.2 m tall, with branched, thinly hairy stems. The leaves are biternate; each leaf has three groups of three leaflets. The flowers, in various shades of purple, blue, pink and white, are pendent or horizontal with hooked spurs, and appear in early summer. The Latin specific epithet vulgaris means “common”. The plant is a member of the poisonous Ranunculus family and all parts of the plant, including the seeds, are poisonous if ingested. The acute toxicity test in mice showed that ethanol extract and the main flavonoid compound isocytisoside from the leaves and stems of Aquilegia vulgaris can be classified as nontoxic since a dose of 3000 mg/kg did not cause mortality in mice.  In traditional herbalism columbine was considered sacred to Venus; carrying a posy of it was said to arouse the affections of a loved one. Nicholas Culpeper recommended the seeds taken in wine to speed the process of childbirth. In modern herbal medicine it is used as an astringent and diuretic. (W)
    akeleier_columbine_aquilegia-6.jpg
  • Aquilegia vulgaris (European columbine, common columbine, granny's nightcap, granny's bonnet) is a species of columbine native to Europe. It is a flowering herbaceous perennial plant growing to 1.2 m tall, with branched, thinly hairy stems. The leaves are biternate; each leaf has three groups of three leaflets. The flowers, in various shades of purple, blue, pink and white, are pendent or horizontal with hooked spurs, and appear in early summer. The Latin specific epithet vulgaris means “common”. The plant is a member of the poisonous Ranunculus family and all parts of the plant, including the seeds, are poisonous if ingested. The acute toxicity test in mice showed that ethanol extract and the main flavonoid compound isocytisoside from the leaves and stems of Aquilegia vulgaris can be classified as nontoxic since a dose of 3000 mg/kg did not cause mortality in mice.  In traditional herbalism columbine was considered sacred to Venus; carrying a posy of it was said to arouse the affections of a loved one. Nicholas Culpeper recommended the seeds taken in wine to speed the process of childbirth. In modern herbal medicine it is used as an astringent and diuretic. (W)
    akeleier_columbine_aquilegia-4.jpg
  • Aquilegia vulgaris (European columbine, common columbine, granny's nightcap, granny's bonnet) is a species of columbine native to Europe. It is a flowering herbaceous perennial plant growing to 1.2 m tall, with branched, thinly hairy stems. The leaves are biternate; each leaf has three groups of three leaflets. The flowers, in various shades of purple, blue, pink and white, are pendent or horizontal with hooked spurs, and appear in early summer. The Latin specific epithet vulgaris means “common”. The plant is a member of the poisonous Ranunculus family and all parts of the plant, including the seeds, are poisonous if ingested. The acute toxicity test in mice showed that ethanol extract and the main flavonoid compound isocytisoside from the leaves and stems of Aquilegia vulgaris can be classified as nontoxic since a dose of 3000 mg/kg did not cause mortality in mice.  In traditional herbalism columbine was considered sacred to Venus; carrying a posy of it was said to arouse the affections of a loved one. Nicholas Culpeper recommended the seeds taken in wine to speed the process of childbirth. In modern herbal medicine it is used as an astringent and diuretic. (W)
    akeleier_columbine_aquilegia.jpg
  • Aquilegia vulgaris (European columbine, common columbine, granny's nightcap, granny's bonnet) is a species of columbine native to Europe. It is a flowering herbaceous perennial plant growing to 1.2 m tall, with branched, thinly hairy stems. The leaves are biternate; each leaf has three groups of three leaflets. The flowers, in various shades of purple, blue, pink and white, are pendent or horizontal with hooked spurs, and appear in early summer. The Latin specific epithet vulgaris means “common”. The plant is a member of the poisonous Ranunculus family and all parts of the plant, including the seeds, are poisonous if ingested. The acute toxicity test in mice showed that ethanol extract and the main flavonoid compound isocytisoside from the leaves and stems of Aquilegia vulgaris can be classified as nontoxic since a dose of 3000 mg/kg did not cause mortality in mice.  In traditional herbalism columbine was considered sacred to Venus; carrying a posy of it was said to arouse the affections of a loved one. Nicholas Culpeper recommended the seeds taken in wine to speed the process of childbirth. In modern herbal medicine it is used as an astringent and diuretic. (W)
    akeleier_columbine_aquilegia-7.jpg
  • Aquilegia vulgaris (European columbine, common columbine, granny's nightcap, granny's bonnet) is a species of columbine native to Europe. It is a flowering herbaceous perennial plant growing to 1.2 m tall, with branched, thinly hairy stems. The leaves are biternate; each leaf has three groups of three leaflets. The flowers, in various shades of purple, blue, pink and white, are pendent or horizontal with hooked spurs, and appear in early summer. The Latin specific epithet vulgaris means “common”. The plant is a member of the poisonous Ranunculus family and all parts of the plant, including the seeds, are poisonous if ingested. The acute toxicity test in mice showed that ethanol extract and the main flavonoid compound isocytisoside from the leaves and stems of Aquilegia vulgaris can be classified as nontoxic since a dose of 3000 mg/kg did not cause mortality in mice.  In traditional herbalism columbine was considered sacred to Venus; carrying a posy of it was said to arouse the affections of a loved one. Nicholas Culpeper recommended the seeds taken in wine to speed the process of childbirth. In modern herbal medicine it is used as an astringent and diuretic. (W)
    akeleier_columbine_aquilegia-8.jpg
  • Granklubbesopp, Clavariadelphus truncatus, er en karakteristisk sopp som vokser i forholdsvis rike barskoger med helst gran. Kjøttfulle sopper, klubbeformet med flat topp (kjennetegn, skiller den fra stor klubbesopp). Rynkete, gul til gulbrun. Sporelaget er glatt og sitter på yttersiden. Spiselig. The common name of the species is club coral. It is a member of the Gomphaceae family of Basidiomycete fungi. The mushroom is edible and has a sweet taste. While the species is edible, old mushrooms may be spongy and soft inside. Clavariadelphus truncatus is distinguished by a club-shaped fruiting body, with a flattened or squared apex. Fruiting body club-shaped, simple, 4-13 cm tall, 3-6 cm wide, tapering to a narrowed base, lacking a distinct stipe and cap; apex typically flattened or depressed at the center, the margin often raised and irregularly bumpy; surface elsewhere more or less smooth to longitudinally wrinkled or grooved; color pinkish-brown to orange-brown below, shading to yellowish-orange
    clavariadelphus_truncatus_granklubbe...jpg
  • Granklubbesopp, Clavariadelphus truncatus, er en karakteristisk sopp som vokser i forholdsvis rike barskoger med helst gran. Kjøttfulle sopper, klubbeformet med flat topp (kjennetegn, skiller den fra stor klubbesopp). Rynkete, gul til gulbrun. Sporelaget er glatt og sitter på yttersiden. Spiselig. The common name of the species is club coral. It is a member of the Gomphaceae family of Basidiomycete fungi. The mushroom is edible and has a sweet taste. While the species is edible, old mushrooms may be spongy and soft inside. Clavariadelphus truncatus is distinguished by a club-shaped fruiting body, with a flattened or squared apex. Fruiting body club-shaped, simple, 4-13 cm tall, 3-6 cm wide, tapering to a narrowed base, lacking a distinct stipe and cap; apex typically flattened or depressed at the center, the margin often raised and irregularly bumpy; surface elsewhere more or less smooth to longitudinally wrinkled or grooved; color pinkish-brown to orange-brown below, shading to yellowish-orange
    clavariadelphus_truncatus_granklubbe...jpg
  • Granklubbesopp, Clavariadelphus truncatus, er en karakteristisk sopp som vokser i forholdsvis rike barskoger med helst gran. Kjøttfulle sopper, klubbeformet med flat topp (kjennetegn, skiller den fra stor klubbesopp). Rynkete, gul til gulbrun. Sporelaget er glatt og sitter på yttersiden. Spiselig. The common name of the species is club coral. It is a member of the Gomphaceae family of Basidiomycete fungi. The mushroom is edible and has a sweet taste. While the species is edible, old mushrooms may be spongy and soft inside. Clavariadelphus truncatus is distinguished by a club-shaped fruiting body, with a flattened or squared apex. Fruiting body club-shaped, simple, 4-13 cm tall, 3-6 cm wide, tapering to a narrowed base, lacking a distinct stipe and cap; apex typically flattened or depressed at the center, the margin often raised and irregularly bumpy; surface elsewhere more or less smooth to longitudinally wrinkled or grooved; color pinkish-brown to orange-brown below, shading to yellowish-orange
    clavariadelphus_truncatus_granklubbe.jpg
  • Pluggsopp (Paxillus involutus) er en vanlig sopp i Norge, som i fjellet vokser opp til bjørkebeltet normalt fra august til oktober. Giftig. Commonly known as the brown roll-rim, common roll-rim, or poison pax. Paxillus involutus, commonly known as the brown roll-rim, common roll-rim, or poison pax, is a basidiomycete fungus widely distributed across the Northern Hemisphere. It has been unintentionally introduced to Australia, New Zealand, and South America, likely been transported in soil with European trees. Various shades of brown in colour, the fruit body grows up to 6 cm high and has a funnel-shaped cap up to 12 cm with a distinctive inrolled rim and decurrent gills that may be pore-like close to the stipe. Although it has gills, it is more closely related to the pored boletes than to typical gilled mushrooms. was widely eaten in Central and Eastern Europe until World War II, although English guidebooks did not recommend it. In Poland, the mushroom was often eaten after pickling or salting. It was known to be a gastrointestinal irritant when ingested raw but had been presumed edible after cooking. In the mid-1980s, Swiss physician René Flammer discovered an antigen within the mushroom that stimulates an autoimmune reaction causing the body's immune cells to consider its own red blood cells as foreign and attack them. Despite this, it was not until 1990 that guidebooks firmly warned against eating P. involutus
    pluggsopp_axillus_involutus.jpg
  • Lakssopp, skivesoppslekt med åtte arter i Norge. Oftest lakserøde til rødfiolette små sopper med tynn stilk og tykke, voksaktige skiver. Blekner i tørt vær. Sporepulveret er hvitt, sporene er ofte kuleformede, piggete og fargeløse. Lakssopp, Laccaria laccata, er ytterst vanlig og sterkt variabel. Egne arter til fjells, i sanddyner og i eikeblandskog. Ametystsopp L. amethystina er vakkert fiolett. De andre er lakserøde i ulike sjatteringer. Alle artene er spiselige, men tynnkjøttete og har liten matverdi. Variabel i fargen med mange rosabrune varianter. 2-6 cm bred, 6-12 cm høy. Lakssopp er enn av Norges vanligste ektomykorrhizasopper og fins fra fjæra og høyt til fjells og fra åpen mark til tett skog. Formvariabel og uutredet systematisk. Laccaria laccata, commonly known as the deceiver, or waxy laccaria, is a white-spored species of small edible mushroom. It is a highly variable mushroom, and can look quite washed out, colorless and drab, but when younger it often assumes red, pinkish brown, and orange tones. The deceiver is a small mushroom with a cap up to 6 cm, convex when young and later flattening or even depressed in the center. It can be various shades of salmon pink, brick-red, or shades of orange or brown when moist or young, and duller and paler when dry.
    lakssopp_laccaria_laccata-2.jpg
  • Lakssopp, skivesoppslekt med åtte arter i Norge. Oftest lakserøde til rødfiolette små sopper med tynn stilk og tykke, voksaktige skiver. Blekner i tørt vær. Sporepulveret er hvitt, sporene er ofte kuleformede, piggete og fargeløse. Lakssopp, Laccaria laccata, er ytterst vanlig og sterkt variabel. Egne arter til fjells, i sanddyner og i eikeblandskog. Ametystsopp L. amethystina er vakkert fiolett. De andre er lakserøde i ulike sjatteringer. Alle artene er spiselige, men tynnkjøttete og har liten matverdi. Variabel i fargen med mange rosabrune varianter. 2-6 cm bred, 6-12 cm høy. Lakssopp er enn av Norges vanligste ektomykorrhizasopper og fins fra fjæra og høyt til fjells og fra åpen mark til tett skog. Formvariabel og uutredet systematisk. Laccaria laccata, commonly known as the deceiver, or waxy laccaria, is a white-spored species of small edible mushroom. It is a highly variable mushroom, and can look quite washed out, colorless and drab, but when younger it often assumes red, pinkish brown, and orange tones. The deceiver is a small mushroom with a cap up to 6 cm, convex when young and later flattening or even depressed in the center. It can be various shades of salmon pink, brick-red, or shades of orange or brown when moist or young, and duller and paler when dry.
    lakssopp_laccaria_laccata.jpg
  • Mørk høstmorkel, Helvella lacunosa. Luen er sadelformet, uregelmessig, svart til gråsvart, glatt og 3-6 cm bred. Stilk 3-6 cm, tykk, grå, hul og furet eller ribbet på langs. Mild lukt og smak. Spiselig. Helvella lacunosa, also known as the slate grey saddle or fluted black elfin saddle, is an ascomycete fungus of the family Helvellaceae. the Elfin's Saddle, is rather morbid in its appearance, with both the stem and the cap in shades of leaden grey. Høstmorkler er en slekt i gruppen sekksporesopper. De har et svært variert utseende, med foldete utforminger av hatten som kan ligne et øre, en kopp eller en sadel. Det er lett å skille høstmorkler fra andre sopper, men det er svært vanskelig å skille de ulike artene fra hverandre basert på utseende, så høstmorklene er under utredning i Norden.
    mork_hostmorkel_helvella_lacunosa.jpg
  • Mørk høstmorkel, Helvella lacunosa. Luen er sadelformet, uregelmessig, svart til gråsvart, glatt og 3-6 cm bred. Stilk 3-6 cm, tykk, grå, hul og furet eller ribbet på langs. Mild lukt og smak. Spiselig. Helvella lacunosa, also known as the slate grey saddle or fluted black elfin saddle, is an ascomycete fungus of the family Helvellaceae. the Elfin's Saddle, is rather morbid in its appearance, with both the stem and the cap in shades of leaden grey. Høstmorkler er en slekt i gruppen sekksporesopper. De har et svært variert utseende, med foldete utforminger av hatten som kan ligne et øre, en kopp eller en sadel. Det er lett å skille høstmorkler fra andre sopper, men det er svært vanskelig å skille de ulike artene fra hverandre basert på utseende, så høstmorklene er under utredning i Norden.
    mork_hostmorkel_helvella_lacunosa-2.jpg
  • Aquilegia vulgaris (European columbine, common columbine, granny's nightcap, granny's bonnet) is a species of columbine native to Europe. It is a flowering herbaceous perennial plant growing to 1.2 m tall, with branched, thinly hairy stems. The leaves are biternate; each leaf has three groups of three leaflets. The flowers, in various shades of purple, blue, pink and white, are pendent or horizontal with hooked spurs, and appear in early summer. The Latin specific epithet vulgaris means “common”. The plant is a member of the poisonous Ranunculus family and all parts of the plant, including the seeds, are poisonous if ingested. The acute toxicity test in mice showed that ethanol extract and the main flavonoid compound isocytisoside from the leaves and stems of Aquilegia vulgaris can be classified as nontoxic since a dose of 3000 mg/kg did not cause mortality in mice.  In traditional herbalism columbine was considered sacred to Venus; carrying a posy of it was said to arouse the affections of a loved one. Nicholas Culpeper recommended the seeds taken in wine to speed the process of childbirth. In modern herbal medicine it is used as an astringent and diuretic. (W)
    akeleier_columbine_aquilegia-5.jpg
  • Aquilegia vulgaris (European columbine, common columbine, granny's nightcap, granny's bonnet) is a species of columbine native to Europe. It is a flowering herbaceous perennial plant growing to 1.2 m tall, with branched, thinly hairy stems. The leaves are biternate; each leaf has three groups of three leaflets. The flowers, in various shades of purple, blue, pink and white, are pendent or horizontal with hooked spurs, and appear in early summer. The Latin specific epithet vulgaris means “common”. The plant is a member of the poisonous Ranunculus family and all parts of the plant, including the seeds, are poisonous if ingested. The acute toxicity test in mice showed that ethanol extract and the main flavonoid compound isocytisoside from the leaves and stems of Aquilegia vulgaris can be classified as nontoxic since a dose of 3000 mg/kg did not cause mortality in mice.  In traditional herbalism columbine was considered sacred to Venus; carrying a posy of it was said to arouse the affections of a loved one. Nicholas Culpeper recommended the seeds taken in wine to speed the process of childbirth. In modern herbal medicine it is used as an astringent and diuretic. (W)
    akeleier_columbine_aquilegia-3.jpg
  • Pluggsopp (Paxillus involutus) er en vanlig sopp i Norge, som i fjellet vokser opp til bjørkebeltet normalt fra august til oktober. Giftig. Commonly known as the brown roll-rim, common roll-rim, or poison pax. Paxillus involutus, commonly known as the brown roll-rim, common roll-rim, or poison pax, is a basidiomycete fungus widely distributed across the Northern Hemisphere. It has been unintentionally introduced to Australia, New Zealand, and South America, likely been transported in soil with European trees. Various shades of brown in colour, the fruit body grows up to 6 cm high and has a funnel-shaped cap up to 12 cm with a distinctive inrolled rim and decurrent gills that may be pore-like close to the stipe. Although it has gills, it is more closely related to the pored boletes than to typical gilled mushrooms. was widely eaten in Central and Eastern Europe until World War II, although English guidebooks did not recommend it. In Poland, the mushroom was often eaten after pickling or salting. It was known to be a gastrointestinal irritant when ingested raw but had been presumed edible after cooking. In the mid-1980s, Swiss physician René Flammer discovered an antigen within the mushroom that stimulates an autoimmune reaction causing the body's immune cells to consider its own red blood cells as foreign and attack them. Despite this, it was not until 1990 that guidebooks firmly warned against eating P. involutus
    pluggsopp_axillus_involutus-4.jpg
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Bente Haarstad Photography

  • Portfolio
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Video
  • Blog
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • About
  • Contact