Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Gnetum gnemon is a gymnosperm species of Gnetum, its native area spans from Mizoram and Assam in India down south through Malay Peninsula, Malay Archipelago and the Philippines in southeast Asia to the western Pacific islands. [3]
Pinus, the pines, is a genus of approximately 111 extant tree and shrub species. The genus is currently split into two subgenera: subgenus Pinus (hard pines), and subgenus Strobus (soft pines).
Paramedusium [98] [99] [100] Gürich 1933 Discoid fossil with no clear diagnostic characters Namibia: Paravendia [56] Ivantsov 2004 Proarticulata Russia: Parvancorina [106] Glaessner 1958 Australia: Parviscopa: Hofmann, O'Brien et King 2008 Canada: Pectinifrons [107] Bamforth, Narbonne et Anderson 2008 Canada: Persimedusites: Hahn et Pflug 1980 ...
Common ash (Fraxinus excelsior), a deciduous broad-leaved tree European larch (Larix decidua), a coniferous tree which is also deciduousIn botany, a tree is a perennial plant with an elongated stem, or trunk, usually supporting branches and leaves.
Eusideroxylon are canopy tree species with erect or spreading branches and extremely durable and decay-resistant wood.. Eusideroxylon zwageri is a slow growing (0.5 metres per year) [4] [5] tall evergreen tree with a straight bole (usually host to Cassytha, a parasitic vine with leaves reduced to scales, up to half of the tree's height).
Falcataria falcata (syns.Albizia falcata, Falcataria moluccana and Paraserianthes falcataria), commonly known as the Moluccan albizia, is a species of fast-growing tree in the family Fabaceae. [3]
Pinus merkusii is closely related to the Tenasserim pine (P. latteri), which occurs farther north in southeast Asia from Myanmar to Vietnam; some botanists treat the two as conspecific (under the name P. merkusii, which was described first), but P. latteri differs in longer (18–27 cm or 7– 10 + 1 ⁄ 2 in) and stouter (over 1 mm thick) leaves and larger cones with thicker scales, the cones ...
The APG IV system of 2016 recognises the family and places it in the order Ranunculales in the clade eudicots. [2]In some older treatments of the family, Berberidaceae only included four genera (Berberis, Epimedium, Mahonia, Vancouveria), with the other genera treated in separate families, Leonticaceae (Bongardia, Caulophyllum, Gymnospermium, Leontice), Nandinaceae (Nandina), and ...