Haplomitrium Hookeri Var
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Haplomitrium Hookeri Var
''Haplomitrium'' is a genus of liverworts. Species Species of ''Haplomitrium'': * Subgenus (''Calobryum'') (Nees 1846) Schuster 1967c Endlicher 1840] ** ''Haplomitrium blumei'' (Nees 1846) Schuster 1963 ** ''Haplomitrium mnioides'' (Sextus Otto Lindberg, Lindberg 1875) Schuster 1963 * Subgenus (''Haplomitrium'') Nees 1833 nom. cons. ** ''Section Archibryum'' (Schuster 1967c) Engel 1981 *** '' Haplomitrium gibbsiae'' ( Steph. 1917) Schuster 1963 *** '' Haplomitrium intermedium'' Berrie 1962 ** ''Section Haplomitrium'' Nees 1833 nom. cons. *** ''Haplomitrium hookeri'' ( Lyell ex Sm. 1814) Nees 1833 **** ''Haplomitrium hookeri'' var. ''minutum'' ( Campbell 1987) Bartholomew-Began 1991 *** ''Haplomitrium monoicum'' Engel 1981 *** ''Haplomitrium ovalifolium ''Haplomitrium'' is a genus of liverworts. Species Species of ''Haplomitrium'': * Subgenus (''Calobryum'') (Nees 1846) Schuster 1967c Endlicher 1840] ** ''Haplomitrium blumei'' (Nees 1846) Schuster 1963 ** ''Haplomitrium mnio ...
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Conserved Name
A conserved name or ''nomen conservandum'' (plural ''nomina conservanda'', abbreviated as ''nom. cons.'') is a scientific name that has specific nomenclatural protection. That is, the name is retained, even though it violates one or more rules which would otherwise prevent it from being legitimate. ''Nomen conservandum'' is a Latin term, meaning "a name to be conserved". The terms are often used interchangeably, such as by the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants, ''International Code of Nomenclature for Algae, Fungi, and Plants'' (ICN), while the ''International Code of Zoological Nomenclature'' favours the term "''conserved name''". The process for conserving botanical names is different from that for zoological names. Under the botanical code, names may also be "suppressed", ''nomen rejiciendum'' (plural ''nomina rejicienda'' or ''nomina utique rejicienda'', abbreviated as ''nom. rej.''), or rejected in favour of a particular conserved name, and combi ...
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Sextus Otto Lindberg
Sextus Otto Lindberg (29 March 1835 – 20 February 1889) was a Swedish physician and botanist, known as a bryologist. Life He was born in Stockholm, and educated in Uppsala. He worked in the Grand Duchy of Finland, then part of the Russian Empire. He became professor of botany, and dean of the physics-mathematics faculty, at the University of Helsingfors. With Emil Frithiof Lackström he edited the exsiccata ''Hepaticae Scandinavicae exsiccata quarum specimina ediderunt S. O. Lindberg et E. Fr. Lackström'' (1874). He was honored with the genus name ''Lindbergia'' in the family Leskeaceae, published by Swedish bryologist Nils Conrad Kindberg in 1897. His son Harald was honored with the genus name ''Lindbergella'' (a synonym of ''Poa'') in the family Poaceae, published by Irish botanist Norman Bor in 1969. Between 1993 and 1997 Sinikka Piippo edited the exsiccata ''Hepaticae Exsiccatae S. O. Lindbergii'' with the serial specimens distributed by the Botanical Museum, Universit ...
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Haplomitrium Ovalifolium
''Haplomitrium'' is a genus of liverworts. Species Species of ''Haplomitrium'': * Subgenus (''Calobryum'') (Nees 1846) Schuster 1967c Endlicher 1840] ** ''Haplomitrium blumei'' (Nees 1846) Schuster 1963 ** ''Haplomitrium mnioides'' (Sextus Otto Lindberg, Lindberg 1875) Schuster 1963 * Subgenus (''Haplomitrium'') Nees 1833 nom. cons. ** ''Section Archibryum'' (Schuster 1967c) Engel 1981 *** '' Haplomitrium gibbsiae'' ( Steph. 1917) Schuster 1963 *** '' Haplomitrium intermedium'' Berrie 1962 ** ''Section Haplomitrium'' Nees 1833 nom. cons. *** ''Haplomitrium hookeri'' ( Lyell ex Sm. Sir James Edward Smith (2 December 1759 – 17 March 1828) was an English botanist and founder of the Linnean Society. Early life and education Smith was born in Norwich in 1759, the son of a wealthy wool merchant. He started studying botan ... 1814) Nees 1833 **** ''Haplomitrium hookeri'' var. ''minutum'' ( Campbell 1987) Bartholomew-Began 1991 *** '' Haplomitrium monoicum'' Engel 1981 *** '' ...
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Ella Campbell
Dame Ella Orr Campbell (28 October 1910 – 24 July 2003) was a New Zealand botanist. An expert on bryophytes, she published 130 scientific papers on liverworts, hornworts, orchids, and wetlands. She became the first woman faculty member of the Massey Agricultural College (now Massey University) in 1945, and in 2003 the herbarium at Massey was renamed the Dame Ella Campbell Herbarium in her honour. Following her retirement from teaching in 1976, she continued to research and publish for another two decades, finally retiring in 2000 at the age of 90. Early life and education Campbell was born in Dunedin to Orr Campbell, a building contractor, and Agnes (née Kinder) Campbell, the eldest of five children. Her mother had studied pharmacy at the University of Otago and her mother's sister Jane was one of the first women to attain a medical degree in New Zealand. Campbell attributed her interest in botany to walks that she had taken with her father as a child; she was also influenced ...
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Haplomitrium Hookeri Var
''Haplomitrium'' is a genus of liverworts. Species Species of ''Haplomitrium'': * Subgenus (''Calobryum'') (Nees 1846) Schuster 1967c Endlicher 1840] ** ''Haplomitrium blumei'' (Nees 1846) Schuster 1963 ** ''Haplomitrium mnioides'' (Sextus Otto Lindberg, Lindberg 1875) Schuster 1963 * Subgenus (''Haplomitrium'') Nees 1833 nom. cons. ** ''Section Archibryum'' (Schuster 1967c) Engel 1981 *** '' Haplomitrium gibbsiae'' ( Steph. 1917) Schuster 1963 *** '' Haplomitrium intermedium'' Berrie 1962 ** ''Section Haplomitrium'' Nees 1833 nom. cons. *** ''Haplomitrium hookeri'' ( Lyell ex Sm. 1814) Nees 1833 **** ''Haplomitrium hookeri'' var. ''minutum'' ( Campbell 1987) Bartholomew-Began 1991 *** ''Haplomitrium monoicum'' Engel 1981 *** ''Haplomitrium ovalifolium ''Haplomitrium'' is a genus of liverworts. Species Species of ''Haplomitrium'': * Subgenus (''Calobryum'') (Nees 1846) Schuster 1967c Endlicher 1840] ** ''Haplomitrium blumei'' (Nees 1846) Schuster 1963 ** ''Haplomitrium mnio ...
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James Edward Smith (botanist)
Sir James Edward Smith (2 December 1759 – 17 March 1828) was an English botanist and founder of the Linnean Society. Early life and education Smith was born in Norwich in 1759, the son of a wealthy wool merchant. He started studying botanical science when he was eighteen. In 1781 he enrolled in the medical course at the University of Edinburgh, where he studied chemistry under Joseph Black, natural history under John Walker, and botany under John Hope, an early teacher of Linnaean taxonomy. He moved to London in 1783 to continue his studies and became a friend of Sir Joseph Banks, who was offered the entire collection of books, manuscripts and specimens of the Swedish natural historian and botanist Carl Linnaeus following the death of his son Carolus Linnaeus the Younger. Banks declined the purchase, but Smith borrowed money from his father and bought the collection for the price of £1,000 in 1784. Smith was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1785. Academic ca ...
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Charles Lyell (botanist)
Charles Lyell (1767–1849) was a Scottish botanist, known also as a translator of Dante. Life Lyell was born on 7 March 1767, at Kinnordy, Forfarshire, Scotland. He was the eldest son of Charles Lyell of Kinnordy, Forfarshire, Scotland, and Mary Beale of West Looe; his sister Anne married Gilbert Heathcote. Education He was educated at St Paul's School, London, the University of St. Andrews and Peterhouse, Cambridge, where he graduated B.A. in 1791, proceeding M.A. in 1794. A law student at Lincoln's Inn, Lyell also travelled. In 1796 he inherited the Kinnordy estate at Kirriemuir. He gave up law as a profession, and married. From 1797 to 1825 Lyell lived at Bartley Lodge in the New Forest; in 1813 he became a fellow of the Linnean Society. In 1826 he settled at Kinnordy, and he died there on 8 November 1849, leaving a library of works relating to his studies. Works Lyell concentrated on botany, especially the study of mosses; several species of these plants bear his ...
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Haplomitrium Intermedium
''Haplomitrium'' is a genus of liverworts. Species Species of ''Haplomitrium'': * Subgenus (''Calobryum'') (Nees 1846) Schuster 1967c Endlicher 1840] ** ''Haplomitrium blumei'' (Nees 1846) Schuster 1963 ** ''Haplomitrium mnioides'' (Sextus Otto Lindberg, Lindberg 1875) Schuster 1963 * Subgenus (''Haplomitrium'') Nees 1833 nom. cons. ** ''Section Archibryum'' (Schuster 1967c) Engel 1981 *** '' Haplomitrium gibbsiae'' ( Steph. 1917) Schuster 1963 *** '' Haplomitrium intermedium'' Berrie 1962 ** ''Section Haplomitrium'' Nees 1833 nom. cons. *** ''Haplomitrium hookeri'' ( Lyell ex Sm. 1814) Nees 1833 **** ''Haplomitrium hookeri'' var. ''minutum'' ( Campbell 1987) Bartholomew-Began 1991 *** ''Haplomitrium monoicum'' Engel 1981 *** ''Haplomitrium ovalifolium ''Haplomitrium'' is a genus of liverworts. Species Species of ''Haplomitrium'': * Subgenus (''Calobryum'') (Nees 1846) Schuster 1967c Endlicher 1840] ** ''Haplomitrium blumei'' (Nees 1846) Schuster 1963 ** ''Haplomitrium mnio ...
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Franz Stephani
Franz Stephani (15 April 1842 – 23 February 1927) was a German bryologist specializing in liverworts. This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation when citing a botanical name. Stephani was born in Berlin, Province of Brandenburg, in 1842. He attended and graduated from the Königliches Gymnasium, whereupon he began training to be a businessman in the wool-spinning industry. He worked both in a toy shop, and in a publishing house. In 1869, he married Marie Kell, daughter of the novelist Julius Kell and had two children. By the age of 34, Stephani began publishing papers on the subject of liverworts. He never attended university, and it is not known how his interest in bryology was sparked. Stephani is most remembered for his ''Species Hepaticarum'', a six-volume attempt to catalog all of the world's species of liverworts and hornwort Hornworts are a group of non-vascular Embryophytes (land plants) constituting the division Anthocerotophyta (). The common n ...
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Haplomitrium Gibbsiae
''Haplomitrium gibbsiae'' is a species of liverwort. The specific Latin epithet of ''gibbsiae'' is in honour of Lilian Gibbs Lilian Suzette Gibbs (1870–1925) was a British botanist who worked for the British Museum in London and was an authority on mountain ecosystems. Education She studied initially at Swanley Horticultural College in Kent, UK (1899-1901) and th ... (1870–1925), a British botanist. References Calobryales Plants described in 1917 {{bryophyte-stub ...
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Haplomitrium Mnioides
''Haplomitrium mnioides'' is a species of liverwort from China, Taiwan, and Japan Japan is an island country in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean off the northeast coast of the Asia, Asian mainland, it is bordered on the west by the Sea of Japan and extends from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea .... References Plants described in 1875 Flora of Japan Calobryales {{bryophyte-stub ...
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