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CCCBDB: Computational Chemistry Comparison and Benchmark DataBase National Institute of Standards and Technology: gas phase molecules "CCCDBD" 2069 CCRIS Chemical Carcinogenesis Research Information System National Library of Medicine substances that affect tumors CCRIS from primary literature, reviewed by experts "CCRIS subset of PubChem ...
'The All-Species Living Tree' Project logo ' The All-Species Living Tree' Project is a collaboration between various academic groups/institutes, such as ARB, SILVA rRNA database project, and LPSN, with the aim of assembling a database of 16S rRNA sequences of all validly published species of Bacteria and Archaea. [1] At one stage, 23S sequences ...
One subspecies, that of Pleurotus nebrodensis, also was evaluated but has since been removed. At the time no subpopulations were evaluated. At the time no subpopulations were evaluated. As of October 2002 [update] , the New Zealand Threat Classification System listed 1512 species and 39 subspecies of New Zealand fungi , with 65 species ...
If two or more genera are formally designated and the type specimens are later assigned to the same genus, the first to be published (in chronological order) is the senior synonym, and all other instances are junior synonyms. Senior synonyms are generally used, except by special decision of the ICZN, but junior synonyms cannot be used again ...
Order Tissierellales Family Gottschalkiaceae Genus Gottschalkia : Clostridium acidurici and C. purinilyticum , first proposed in 2013 together with Clostridium angusta , reassigned in 2017.
Cordyceps adpropinquans (Ces.) Sacc. 1883; Cordyceps aeruginosclerota Z.Q. Liang & A.Y. Liu 1997; Cordyceps agriotidis Kawam. 1955; Cordyceps alba Kobayasi & Shimizu 1982; Cordyceps albella Massee 1899
Cercopithecoidea contains only a single family, Cercopithecidae, and includes nearly half of the species in the suborder Haplorhini, itself one of two suborders in the order Primates. Cercopithecoids are found in Asia and Africa, generally in forests, though some species can be found in shrublands , wetlands , and caves.
The following species in the flowering plant genus Ceropegia are accepted by Plants of the World Online. [1] In 2017, molecular and morphological evidence showed that many members of the subtribe Stapeliinae, including the entirety of the large genus Brachystelma, are nested inside Ceropegia.