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A cultivar must meet certain criteria in order to be recognised by UPOV as a named variety. In a few lists, variety means something else: a taxonomic rank below that of species (a kind of subspecies). If the species' binomial name is followed by the word var. and another name, that is a botanical variety, not a cultivar.
Magnolia fulva is a species of flowering plant in the family Magnoliaceae, native to south-central China and Vietnam. [2] It was first described, as Michelia fulva, in 1987. [5] Two varieties are recognized: [2] Magnolia fulva var. calcicola (C.Y.Wu ex Y.W.Law & Y.F.Wu) ined. Magnolia fulva var. fulva
Hemerocallis fulva var. fulva has escaped from cultivation across much of the United States and parts of Canada and has become a weedy or invasive species. [9] It persists also where dumped and spreads more or less rapidly by vegetative increase into woods and fields and along roadsides and ditches, hence its common name ditch lily.
Rhododendron ser. Fulva Tagg in J. B. Stevenson 1930 Fulva is a subsection of section Ponticum in Hymenanthes in the genus Rhododendron . It comprises 2 species of shrubs native to East Asia .
[4] [5] [6] The only known species is Arctophila fulva, commonly known as pendant grass, native to northern parts of Eurasia and North America (Russia, Finland, Sweden, Svalbard, Greenland, Alaska, Canada).
" Among thousands observed by the author during the winter of 1904-05 not more than a dozen lacked the pink coloration and these resembled the variety C.capillata var. fulva. They were, however, swimming among swarms of the typical pink versicolor medusae. The variety versicolor appears to be a well-marked local race of Cyanea capillata."
Iris fulva Ker-Gawl. – Copper Iris; Iris giganticaerulea – Giant Blue Iris, Giant Blue Flag; Iris hexagona Walt. – Dixie Iris; Iris nelsonii Randolph – (Abbeville Iris) Iris savannarum Small – Prairie iris; Series Laevigatae (which includes the Japanese irises) Iris ensata Thunb. – Japanese Iris, hanashÅbu (including I. kaempferi)
Gallowayella fulva is a species of foliose lichen in the family Teloschistaceae. [2] It was first scientifically described in 1796 by German lichenologist Georg Franz Hoffmann, who classified it as a member of genus Lobaria. [3] It has also been classified in the genera Oxneria, Xanthomendoza and Xanthoria in its taxonomic history. [1]