Identifying a plant is a delicate process that requires much more than a photo or an intuition. To avoid any mistakes — sometimes serious ones — here is the recommended method:
✔️ 1. Observe the entire plant
A single leaf or flower is NEVER sufficient.
You must examine:
• overall habit, morphology
• stem
• leaves (shape, veins, arrangement)
• flowers
• fruits or seeds if present
• habitat and context
✔️ 2. Photograph several key parts
This significantly increases the chances of reliable identification.
✔️ 3. Check the season
Some species only exist at a specific time → inconsistency = danger.
✔️ 4. Look for known confusions
Many toxic plants look like edible plants.
Druidz reports some confusions, but the user remains entirely responsible for their verifications.
✔️ 5. Cross-reference multiple sources
A single source is never enough:
• paper flora guides
• local botanists
• naturalist associations
• scientific resources
⚠️ Absolutely essential
In case of doubt or uncertainty: do not harvest, do not consume.
⚠️ Legal and liability reminder
The Application does not encourage you to harvest in any particular location and does not validate any identification.
The user must:
• verify the plant's identity themselves,
• respect harvesting laws and private property,
• assume full responsibility for their choices.
Even experienced botanists sometimes make mistakes. The reasons are numerous:
❗ 1. Natural variability
The same species can change in form depending on:
• age
• light conditions
• humidity
• soil type
• season
❗ 2. Extremely similar plants
Typical examples:
• Wild garlic ↔ Lily of the valley ↔ Autumn crocus
• Wild carrot ↔ Hemlock
• Wild chervil ↔ Hemlock water dropwort
Some confusions can be fatal.
❗ 3. Photos are often misleading
The camera flattens perspectives, alters colors, and doesn't show certain details.
❗ 4. Some species CANNOT be identified from a photo
Especially among:
• umbellifers (dangerous family)
• grasses
• seedlings
• hybrids
❗ 5. Botanical databases sometimes contain errors
Even GBIF, Pl@ntNet, or Catalogue of Life are not perfect.
⚠️ Important concept
Harvesting a misidentified plant is a risky activity that Druidz cannot guarantee or secure.
Pl@ntNet uses image recognition AI.
Here are the basics:
✔️ How it works
• The photo is compared to a gigantic image database.
• The algorithm calculates probabilities.
• It returns a list of possible species, never a certainty.
✔️ What Pl@ntNet does well
• recognizes common plants
• finds similarities
• suggests identification leads
✔️ What Pl@ntNet cannot do
• guarantee accuracy
• distinguish certain very similar species
• take into account terrain, season, smell
• replace an expert
• confirm edibility
⚠️ Essential legal point
Pl@ntNet is an independent third-party service. Druidz cannot guarantee its operation or the accuracy of its results.
Several possible reasons:
❌ 1. Incomplete photo
Pl@ntNet cannot correctly identify:
• an isolated leaf
• a plant that is too young
• a partially visible plant
❌ 2. Poor lighting / blurry
The AI needs sharp details.
❌ 3. The plant doesn't exist in the database
Some local or rare species may be absent or underrepresented.
❌ 4. Context not taken into account
Season, habitat, toxicity → the AI doesn't understand them.
❌ 5. Natural confusions between similar species
Some plants can only be distinguished in a laboratory or with a botanical magnifying glass.
❌ 6. Technical problems (quota, network, server)
⚠️ Safety reminder
A Pl@ntNet error does not exempt you from your responsibility:
you must absolutely verify the identification yourself.
Absolute rule:
If in doubt, do not consume and do not harvest.
If you want to verify:
✔️ 1. Study the key differences
Look for distinguishing features:
• number of petals
• vein shape
• presence of latex
• specific smell
• geography
✔️ 2. Check for dangerous confusions
Druidz reports the most known confusions, but the user remains responsible.
✔️ 3. Cross-reference multiple sources
Never a single source, never a single tool.
✔️ 4. Ask the opinion of an experienced botanist
Internet groups can help, but don't replace an expert.
✔️ 5. Come back later in the season
Flowering is often the easiest time to identify.
⚠️ Legal reminder
A misidentification can have serious consequences; the app does not encourage harvesting and never confirms the safety of a plant.
Here are the most reliable methods:
✔️ 1. Use a paper flora guide
Identification keys allow you to:
• eliminate confusions
• verify actual characteristics
• understand local species
✔️ 2. Compare with official herbaria
Universities, MNHN, Tela Botanica, etc.
✔️ 3. Observe the plant over time
The same plant at several stages = much easier to recognize.
✔️ 4. Consult local experts
Botanists, naturalist guides, associations.
✔️ 5. Participate in workshops / botanical outings
Nothing replaces direct transmission.
⚠️ Safety and liability reminders
• Druidz is not a botanical validation service.
• The user must verify identifications themselves.
• The application does not guarantee the presence, absence, or accuracy of displayed plants.
• The user must strictly respect private property and harvesting regulations.
• Druidz does not recommend harvesting in any specific location and cannot be held responsible for any travel or incident related to a misidentified plant.
Identification errors always follow the same patterns. Knowing them helps avoid serious accidents — sometimes fatal.
❌ 1. Confusing two species from a single leaf
An isolated leaf is NEVER sufficient.
(Lily of the valley, autumn crocus, arum, wild garlic → similar leaves but extreme toxicity.)
❌ 2. Using only Pl@ntNet to "confirm"
Pl@ntNet suggests probabilities, not certainties.
It can make serious mistakes between toxic/edible species.
❌ 3. Thinking a plant is "definitely edible" because you saw it on the Internet
Many articles or videos contain errors.
❌ 4. Ignoring smell, stem, venation, root
Some families (umbellifers) are deadly if you only look at the foliage.
❌ 5. Trying to identify a plant that is too young
Seedlings are almost impossible to identify — even for botanists.
❌ 6. Relying on color (flowers, berries, leaves)
Color varies greatly depending on:
• plant age
• light conditions
• soil
• local mutations
❌ 7. Believing a plant found "in the same place as last year" is the same
Many species grow in the same location.
❌ 8. Not taking habitat into account
An edible plant can grow next to a visually identical toxic plant.
❌ 9. Confusing local species with naturalized exotic species
Some invasive species resemble known European species.
❌ 10. Basing identification on a single detail "that looks like it"
Recognizing a plant = recognizing a complete set of characteristics.
⚠️ Liability reminder
Druidz does not validate any identification and does not encourage consumption or harvesting.
The user must verify themselves and assume responsibility for their choices.
Identifying a plant is a complex task, sometimes impossible without specialized equipment.
In case of any doubt, it is essential to consult a qualified expert.
Druidz does not provide identification, consumption validation, botanical advice, or regulatory validation.
The User remains solely responsible for verification with a professional.
Here is the complete list of types of experts capable of helping to confirm (or refute) an identification, ranked from most precise to most general.
1️⃣ PROFESSIONAL BOTANISTS
They are the most competent specialists to confirm an identification, particularly for:
• confusions between similar species,
• toxic plants,
• complex genera (Apiaceae, Euphorbiaceae, Liliaceae…),
• regional micro-species,
• plants requiring a botanical magnifying glass or dissection.
Institutions providing this type of expertise:
• National Botanical Conservatories (CBN)
• National Museum of Natural History (MNHN)
• University herbaria & botanical laboratories
• Regional botanical societies
• Institutional botanical gardens
• Natural history museums
Why consult a botanist?
• they have specialized books unavailable to the general public,
• they know regional confusions,
• they can say "impossible to identify from a photo", which protects the user,
• they are the only ones capable of identifying certain taxa with certainty.
2️⃣ RECOGNIZED INDEPENDENT EXPERTS
Some specialists are renowned for their experience, publications, or teaching ability.
For purely illustrative purposes (and without any connection to Druidz), here are two figures known to the general public:
• François Couplan – ethnobotanist, author, recognized teacher in the French-speaking world.
• Christophe de Hody – botanist and trainer, founder of Chemin de la Nature.
⚠️ Druidz does not recommend anyone to validate consumption.
These names are cited because they are known to the public, not as service providers or advisors to the application.
The user remains solely responsible for verification with the professional of their choice.
3️⃣ NATURE GUIDES & FIELD PROFESSIONALS
Professionals with solid naturalist training can help identify a plant on site, which is much more reliable than via photo.
Examples of professional categories:
• Mountain Guides (AMM) trained in regional botany
• Nature facilitators and eco-interpreters
• Ethnobotany trainers
• Specialized guides by region (alpine pastures, coastline, wetlands, Mediterranean forests…)
Advantages:
• knowledge of local terrain,
• identification in context (soil, smell, location, altitude),
• ability to spot confusions specific to the area.
Limitations:
• their opinion never replaces that of a professional botanist,
• identification sometimes remains impossible without microscope or in-depth analysis.
4️⃣ ASSOCIATIONS AND BOTANICAL SOCIETIES
They bring together enlightened amateurs, researchers, and professional botanists.
Among existing structures:
• Botanical Society of France
• Regional botanical societies (Alsace, Centre, Sud-Est, etc.)
• Tela Botanica and its collaborative network
• Naturalist circles
• Specialized university clubs
They can:
• offer field trips,
• verify identifications,
• direct you to a competent expert.
They do not provide validation of edibility or therapeutic use.
5️⃣ HERBALISTS & SPECIALIZED PHARMACISTS
Some professionals have in-depth knowledge of dried medicinal plants.
Useful for recognizing:
• classic medicinal plants,
• cultivated plants,
• plant parts (roots, leaves, flowers).
But they are not specialists in wild field plants.
Their expertise is not sufficient to validate the safety of a fresh or wild plant.
6️⃣ UNIVERSITIES & LABORATORIES
Some universities have botanists who can analyze specimens via:
• microscope,
• chromatography,
• reference herbarium.
This is the most reliable route for complex cases, but not always accessible to the general public.
7️⃣ WHO NOT TO CONSULT (MAJOR RISKS)
❌ Facebook groups / Discord / non-specialized forums
Extremely high error rate.
No verified competence.
Photos are often insufficient.
❌ "Amateur foragers" without training
Same errors as the user, sometimes worse.
❌ Identification apps or AI
Even the best models make regular mistakes, especially:
• in Apiaceae (hemlock family),
• in toxic Liliaceae (lily of the valley, autumn crocus),
• in solanaceae (belladonna / nightshades),
• in indistinct young shoots,
• on partially eaten or damaged plants.
AI should never be used to validate plant consumption.
8️⃣ OFFICIAL PROCEDURE IN CASE OF DOUBT
To protect yourself and the user, here is the recommended procedure:
1. Never consume a plant if identification is not 100% certain.
2. Compare multiple reliable sources (books, floras, scientific organizations).
3. If doubt persists → consume nothing.
4. Consult an expert (botanist, association, qualified professional).
5. Always verify legality and location (private land, protected area, pollution…).
This procedure reminds that Druidz does not validate any harvesting.
Druidz provides no identification, no validation of edibility, no validation of medicinal or food use, and in no way replaces the opinion of a qualified botanist.
All identification, harvesting, or consumption is exclusively the User's responsibility.
The Application disclaims all responsibility for consequences, damages, or errors related to plant identification, including in case of misinterpretation or erroneous source data.
🔟 SIMPLE SUMMARY
In case of doubt:
1. Do not consume.
2. Verify with a competent expert.
3. Druidz is not a validation tool, but a cultural, informative, and community tool.
Some families contain very similar deadly species.
They should be considered "maximum danger" for beginners.
1️⃣ Umbellifers (Apiaceae)
👉 The most dangerous family.
Fatal examples:
• Poison hemlock
• Hemlock water dropwort
• Cowbane
Confusions with:
• wild carrot
• chervil
• parsnip
Differences sometimes invisible without magnifying glass → extreme danger.
2️⃣ Liliaceae / Asparagaceae (similar leaves)
Dramatic confusions:
Wild garlic (edible)
↔ Lily of the valley (deadly)
↔ Autumn crocus (deadly)
↔ Arum (toxic)
Same smell or same shape → high fatal risk.
3️⃣ Solanaceae
Potentially fatal berries resembling:
• wild tomatoes
• physalis
• nightshades
4️⃣ Ranunculaceae
Many irritating or paralyzing toxic species.
5️⃣ Euphorbiaceae (toxic latex)
Little food confusion, but serious irritation.
6️⃣ Grasses
Difficult to identify, often impossible from a photo.
⚠️ Safety reminder
Druidz never recommends consuming plants from complex families.
The user must consult an expert, cross-reference sources, and verify themselves.