Erodium acaule is a species of plant in the family Geraniaceae.
Perennial, acaulescent, 15–25 cm high. Hairs spare, appressed. Root vertical, lignified. Leaves rosulate, lanceolate-oblong, spreading on soil, pinnatisect. Segments sessile, oblong-ovate, Pinnatilobed, in short and acute strips. Flowers 1.5 cm in diameter, bright pink. Petals equal, 2-3 times longer than calyx, rounded at apex. Beak of fruits 4–5 cm long.
Nearly all the year round.
Fields. waste ground.
Coast, lower and middle mountains, Beqaa valley in Lebanon.
Syria, Lebanon, the Palestine region, the Eastern Mediterranean, and southern Europe.
The generic name is derived from the Greek erôdios, heron, since the fruit of this plant, which ends in a long bill, suggests the bill of a heron. The specific name, indicating that the plant is stemless, is formed of the privative prefix a and of the Greek kaulos, stem[1]