. . "Bistorta bistortoides"@sv . . . . . . "27921768"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Polygonum bistortoides"@fr . . . . . . . . "bistortoides"@en . . . . . . . . "Bistorta bistortoides \u00E4r en slidev\u00E4xtart som f\u00F6rst beskrevs av Frederick Traugott Pursh, och fick sitt nu g\u00E4llande namn av John Kunkel Small. Bistorta bistortoides ing\u00E5r i sl\u00E4ktet ormr\u00F6tter, och familjen slidev\u00E4xter. Inga underarter finns listade i Catalogue of Life."@sv . . . . . "Bistorta bistortoides"@en . . . . "Bistorta bistortoides (American bistort, western bistort, smokeweed, mountain meadow knotweed, mountain buckwheat or mountain meadow buckwheat) is a perennial herb in the buckwheat and knotweed family Polygonaceae. The species name remains unresolved. Bistorta bistortoides is distributed throughout the Mountain West in North America from Alaska and British Columbia south into California and east into the Rocky Mountains. Bistorta bistortoides grows from foothills to above the timberline, although plants growing above 7,500 feet (2250 m) are smaller and seldom reach more than 12 inches (30 cm) in height. Plants in other areas may reach over half a meter\u20131.5 feet (20\u201360 cm) tall. The leaves are leathery and up to 40 centimeters (3 feet) long, and are mostly basal on the stem. The dense cylindrical to oblong inflorescence is packed with small white to pinkish flowers, each a few millimeters wide and with protruding stamens. Rodents and bears consume the roots, and elk and deer browse the foliage. American bistort was an important food plant used by Native Americans living in the Mountain West, including Blackfoot and Cheyenne peoples. The roots are edible either raw or fire-roasted with a flavor resembling chestnuts. The seeds can be dried and ground into flour and used to make bread. They were also roasted and eaten as a cracked grain. The young leaves can be eaten raw or cooked."@en . . . "*Persicaria bistortoides ( H.R. Hinds) \n*Polygonum bistortoides (Pursh)"@en . "4659"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . "Polygonum bistortoides est une plante vivace du genre Polygonum pr\u00E9sente dans les r\u00E9gions montagneuses de l'ouest de l'Am\u00E9rique du Nord au Canada et aux \u00C9tats-Unis."@fr . . "1094179196"^^ . "Bistorta bistortoides (American bistort, western bistort, smokeweed, mountain meadow knotweed, mountain buckwheat or mountain meadow buckwheat) is a perennial herb in the buckwheat and knotweed family Polygonaceae. The species name remains unresolved. Bistorta bistortoides is distributed throughout the Mountain West in North America from Alaska and British Columbia south into California and east into the Rocky Mountains."@en . "Bistorta"@en . . . "Bistorta bistortoides \u00E4r en slidev\u00E4xtart som f\u00F6rst beskrevs av Frederick Traugott Pursh, och fick sitt nu g\u00E4llande namn av John Kunkel Small. Bistorta bistortoides ing\u00E5r i sl\u00E4ktet ormr\u00F6tter, och familjen slidev\u00E4xter. Inga underarter finns listade i Catalogue of Life."@sv . "Polygonum bistortoides est une plante vivace du genre Polygonum pr\u00E9sente dans les r\u00E9gions montagneuses de l'ouest de l'Am\u00E9rique du Nord au Canada et aux \u00C9tats-Unis."@fr . . "Small 1906"@en . .