Crepis setosa Haller f., also known as Bristly Hawksbeard or Barkhausia setosa - a genus of mostly annual plants from the Asteraceae (daisy) family, commonly found near human dwellings, along roadsides, at the edges of sparse forests, and on fallow lands and wastelands. Plants of the Crepis genus are typically annual, occasionally biennial, and may be either hairy or glabrous herbs, with stem heights ranging from 5 to 150 cm.
The flowers are usually yellow, ligulate, and bisexual. The flower heads (capitula) are large (or small) and arranged in corymb-like or raceme-like inflorescences, with 1 to 5 heads per stem. The involucre is bell-shaped or cylindrical.
The flowering is long and abundant: from May to October, it is a honey plant visited by bees for collecting nectar and pollen.
Plants of this genus serve as forage for many animals.
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