Search Results
Results 1 - 7 of 7
Page 1 of 1
Previous
Next
Hymenosporum flavum F.Muell. [family PITTOSPORACEAE]
Bedwell, #s.n.
None
Specimens
Australia
Hymenosporum flavum F.Muell. [family PITTOSPORACEAE] (stored under name)
Pittosporum flavum Hook. [family PITTOSPORACEAE]
Pittosporum flavum Hook. [family PITTOSPORACEAE]
Type? of Hymenosporum flavum F.Muell. [family PITTOSPORACEAE]
Mueller, F. v., #s.n.
None
Specimens
Unknown
Type? of Hymenosporum flavum F.Muell. [family PITTOSPORACEAE] (stored under name)
Type? of Hymenosporum flavum F.Muell. [family PITTOSPORACEAE]; Verified by Mueller,
Type? of Hymenosporum flavum F.Muell. [family PITTOSPORACEAE]; Verified by Mueller,
Hymenosporum flavum F.Muell. [family PITTOSPORACEAE]
s.coll., #s.n.
None
Specimens
Australia
Hymenosporum flavum F.Muell. [family PITTOSPORACEAE] (stored under name)
Pittosporum flavum Hook. [family PITTOSPORACEAE]
Pittosporum flavum Hook. [family PITTOSPORACEAE]
Hymenosporum flavum Hook. R. Br. ex F. Muell. [family PITTOSPORACEAE]
FZ, Vol 1, Part 1, page 298, (1960) Author: G. Cufodontis
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Reference Sources
cultivated, introduced from Australia, grown in S. Rhodesia.
a tree or shrub with fragrant cream flowers turning yellow and winged seeds
Filed as Hymenosporum flavum (Hook.) F. Muell. [family PITTOSPORACEAE]
Jativa, Carlos D., #2921
1974-05-22
Specimens
United States
Hymenosporum flavum (Hook.) F. Muell. [family PITTOSPORACEAE] (stored under name)
Letter from Charles Metcalfe to Sir David Prain; from Winkwirth Hill, Godalming; 8 Mar 1918; One page letter comprising of one image; folio 539
Metcalfe, Charles
Letters (Correspondence)
[family PITTOSPORACEAE]
FZ, Vol 1, Part 1, page 298, (1960) Author: G. Cufodontis
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Reference Sources
Woody plants, trees, shrubs or climbers with resin-ducts in the bark, rarely spiny. Leaves alternate, often crowded at the ends of the branches, simple, evergreen and ± leathery, entire or rarely dentate or lobed, without stipules. Inflorescences cymose or paniculate, terminal and/or axillary, rarely flowers in clusters on the old wood or solitary, terminal and/or axillary. Flowers actinomorphic or somewhat irregular, hypogynous, bisexual or functionally (rarely morphologically) unisexual. Sepals 5, free or ± connate, sometimes imbricate. Petals 5, free or with claws slightly connivent, usually with spreading or revolute blades, imbricate in bud. Stamens 5, free, with 2-thecous introrse anthers opening by slits, rarely by apical pores. Ovary sessile or shortly stipitate, paracarpous, with 2–5 carpels and parietal placentas, usually 1-locular, or, less often, 2–5-locular by central contact of the placentas; style simple, stigma capitate or somewhat lobed; ovules 2-several in 2 rows, anatropous, horizontal, with one integument. Fruit a berry or a capsule with entire, rarely split valves. Seeds without an aril but often covered by a viscid resin, rarely dry and winged, with a smooth testa, a hard endosperm and a very minute embryo.
Page 1 of 1
Previous
Next