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A yellow dye is obtained from the flowers
Plants for a Future (2017) at www.plantsforafuture.org.uk. http://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Oenothera+biennis
Previously grown as Oenothera glabra, Oenothera odorata
Other common names include: coffee plant, cure-all, fever plant, field primrose, four o'clock, German rampion, large rampion, night willowherb, scabbish, scurvish, wild four o'clock
In traditional herbal medicine the bark and the leaves are astringent and sedative. They have proved of use in the treatment of gastro-intestinal disorders of a functional origin, whooping cough and asthma
http://www.pfaf.org, https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Oenothera+biennis
Northern America