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Aggreflorum
''Aggreflorum'' is a genus of nine species of shrubs and small trees in the myrtle family Myrtaceae previously included in ''Leptospermum'' . It was first formally described by Peter Gordon Wilson and Margaret M. Heslewood in the journal '' Taxon''. Species The following is a list of species accepted by the Plants of the World Online as at July 2024. *'' Aggreflorum anfractum'' ( A.R.Bean) Peter G.Wilson (Qld.) *'' Aggreflorum benwellii'' (A.R.Bean) Peter G.Wilson (N.S.W.) *'' Aggreflorum brachyandrum'' (F.Muell.) Peter G.Wilson (Qld., N.S.W.) *'' Aggreflorum ellipticum'' (C.T.White & W.D.Francis) Peter G.Wilson (Qld., N.S.W.) *'' Aggreflorum longifolium'' (C.T.White & W.D.Francis) Peter G.Wilson (W.A., Qld., N.T.) *'' Aggreflorum luehmannii'' (F.M.Bailey Frederick Manson Bailey (8 March 1827 – 25 June 1915) was a botanist active in Australia, who made valuable contributions to the characterisation of the flora of Queensland. He was known by his middle name, Manson. ...
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Aggreflorum Benwellii
''Aggreflorum benwellii'' is a species of shrub that is endemic to the Nymboida National Park in New South Wales. It has smooth bark, young branches with conspicuous flanges, narrow elliptical leaves, white flowers and thin-walled, bell-shaped to hemispherical fruit. Description ''Aggreflorum benwellii'' is a shrub that typically grows to a height of and has smooth bark that is shed annually. Young branchlets are glabrous with conspicuous flanges. The leaves are arranged alternately, more or less sessile, paler on the lower surface, narrow elliptical, long and wide. The lower side of young leaves are hairy near their edge. The flowers are borne singly or in groups of up to three in leaf axils on pedicels about long. The sepals are long and glabrous apart from soft hairs on the edges. The petals are white, egg-shaped to round, long and the stamens are long. Flowering has been observed in November and the fruit is a thin-walled, glabrous, bell-shaped to hemispherical capsule ...
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Aggreflorum Longifolium
''Aggreflorum longifolium'' is a species of shrub or small tree that is Endemism, endemic to north-western Australia. It has weeping branches, smooth bark, pale green linear leaves, small white flowers and thin-walled fruit. Description ''Aggreflorum longifolium'' is a shrub or tree that typically grows to a height of and has weeping branches and smooth white, cream-coloured or pink bark. The leaves are arranged alternately, Sessility (botany), sessile, linear, the same shade of pale green on both sides, long and long. The flower buds are arranged singly in leaf wikt:axil, axils surrounded by bracts that are shed before the flower opens. The flowers are wide on a Pedicel (botany), pedicel about long. The Hypanthium, floral cup is long, and the sepals have hairy margins. Flowering occurs from July to October and the fruit is a wikt:glabrous, glabrous Capsule (botany), capsule long and wide. Taxonomy and naming This species was first formally described in 1920 by Cyril Ten ...
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Aggreflorum
''Aggreflorum'' is a genus of nine species of shrubs and small trees in the myrtle family Myrtaceae previously included in ''Leptospermum'' . It was first formally described by Peter Gordon Wilson and Margaret M. Heslewood in the journal ''Taxon''. Species The following is a list of species accepted by the Plants of the World Online as at July 2024. *'' Aggreflorum anfractum'' ( A.R.Bean) Peter G.Wilson (Qld.) *''Aggreflorum benwellii'' (A.R.Bean) Peter G.Wilson (N.S.W.) *'' Aggreflorum brachyandrum'' (F.Muell.) Peter G.Wilson (Qld., N.S.W.) *'' Aggreflorum ellipticum'' (C.T.White & W.D.Francis) Peter G.Wilson (Qld., N.S.W.) *''Aggreflorum longifolium'' (C.T.White & W.D.Francis) Peter G.Wilson (W.A., Qld., N.T.) *'' Aggreflorum luehmannii'' (F.M.Bailey Frederick Manson Bailey (8 March 1827 – 25 June 1915) was a botanist active in Australia, who made valuable contributions to the characterisation of the flora of Queensland. He was known by his middle name, Manson. Earl ...
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Myrtaceae Genera
Myrtaceae, the myrtle family, is a family of dicotyledonous plants placed within the order Myrtales. Myrtle, pōhutukawa, bay rum tree, clove, guava, acca (feijoa), allspice, and eucalyptus are some notable members of this group. All species are woody, contain essential oils, and have flower parts in multiples of four or five. The leaves are evergreen, alternate to mostly opposite, simple, and usually entire (i.e., without a toothed margin). The flowers have a base number of five petals, though in several genera, the petals are minute or absent. The stamens are usually very conspicuous, brightly coloured, and numerous. Evolutionary history Scientists hypothesize that the family Myrtaceae arose between 60 and 56 million years ago (Mya) during the Paleocene era. Pollen fossils have been sourced to the ancient supercontinent Gondwana. The breakup of Gondwana during the Cretaceous period (145 to 66 Mya) geographically isolated disjunct taxa and allowed for rapid speciation; in ...
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Johannes Conrad Schauer
Johannes Conrad Schauer (16 February 1813 – 24 October 1848) was a botanist interested in Spermatophytes. He was born in Frankfurt am Main and attended the gymnasium of Mainz from 1825 to 1837. For the next three years he worked at the Hofgarten of Würzburg. Schauer then gained a position as assistant at the botanical garden at Bonn where he worked until 1832 when he was placed in charge of the botanic garden in Breslau, (now Wrocław in Poland) with C.G. Nees. He gained the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg 1835 and was appointed professor of botany at the University of Greifswald from 1843 until his death in 1848. Although he never visited Australia, many Australian botanists and plant collectors sent him plant specimens, especially eucalypts and other members of the myrtle family, Myrtaceae. For example, when Allan Cunningham died in 1839, Schauer received many botanical specimens from the executor of Cunningham's estate, , including ...
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Aggreflorum Speciosum
''Aggreflorum speciosum'' is a species of flowering plant in the myrtle family Myrtaceaeshrub, and is endemic to eastern Australia. It has pale bark that is shed in strips, broadly lance-shaped to elliptical leaves, white flowers arranged singly or in groups of up to three in leaf axils, and small, woody fruit that falls off when mature. Description ''Aggreflorum speciosum'' is a shrub that typically grows to a height of but sometimes a tree to . It has pale bark that is shed in strips, the younger stems covered with fine hairs. The leaves are lance-shaped to elliptical, mostly long and wide with the base almost stem-clasping. The flowers are white, borne singly or in groups of three and are about wide. The floral cup is covered with soft hairs and about long, tapering to a very short pedicel. The sepals are egg-shaped to triangular, about long, the petals long and the stamens about long. Flowering mainly occurs in August and September and the fruit is a woody capsule abou ...
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Joy Thomps
The word joy refers to the emotion evoked by well-being, success, or good fortune, and is typically associated with feelings of intense, long lasting happiness. Dictionary definitions Dictionary definitions of joy typically include a sense of it being a reaction to an external happening, e.g. a physical sensation experienced, or receiving good news. Distinction vs similar states saw a clear distinction between joy, pleasure, and happiness: "I sometimes wonder whether all pleasures are not substitutes for Joy", and "I call it Joy, which is here a technical term and must be sharply distinguished both from Happiness and Pleasure. Joy (in my sense) has indeed one characteristic, and one only, in common with them; the fact that anyone who has experienced it will want it again... I doubt whether anyone who has tasted it would ever, if both were in his power, exchange it for all the pleasures in the world. But then Joy is never in our power and Pleasure often is." Michela Summa sa ...
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Aggreflorum Purpurascens
''Aggreflorum purpurascens'', commonly known as the purple-stemmed turkey bush, is a shrub or small tree that is endemic to far north Queensland. It has bark that is purple when new, elliptical to broadly lance-shaped leaves, relatively small white flowers arranged in pairs, and small fruit that falls from the plants when the seeds are released. Description ''Aggreflorum purpurascens'' is a shrub or small tree that typically grows to a height of with thin, rough bark that is shed annually to reveal shining purple new bark. Younger stems are hairy at first and have a conspicuous flange near each leaf base. The leaves are elliptical to broadly lance-shaped, about long, wide and glossy on the upper surface, silky hairy on the lower surface. The flowers white, sometimes reddish, wide and usually arranged in pairs. The floral cup is hairy, about long and the sepals are about long. The petals are about long and the stamens are long. Flowering occurs from June to July and the fr ...
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Aggreflorum Pallidum
''Aggreflorum pallidum'' is a species of spreading shrub that is endemic to Queensland. It has thin, firm, rough bark, narrow lance-shaped leaves, white flowers arranged in groups of two or three on side shoots and fruit that remains on the plant until it dies. Description ''Aggreflorum pallidum'' is a spreading shrub that typically grows to a height of and has thin, firm, rough fissured bark on the branches, the branchlets glabrous. The leaves are narrow lance-shaped, pale yellowish green on both surfaces, long and wide and sessile or on a petiole up to long. The flowers are borne in groups of two or three on side shoots or in leaf axils and are white, wide. The floral cup is long and glabrous, and the sepals glabrous with conspicuous oil dots. The petals are more or less round, long and there are thirty to forty stamens that are shorter than the petals. Flowering occurs from March to June and the fruit is a capsule long and wide that remains on the plant at maturity wi ...
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Aggreflorum Luehmannii
''Aggreflorum luehmannii'' is a species of shrub or small tree that is endemic to Queensland. It has glossy green elliptic leaves, white flowers, and fruit that falls from the plant shortly after the seeds are released. Description ''Aggreflorum luehmannii'' is a shrub or small tree and that typically grows to a height of . It has smooth, reddish brown bark that peels in long strips. The leaves are elliptical, glossy when mature, mostly long and wide on a very short petiole. The flowers are white, wide on a short pedicel and arranged on short shoots on the upper leaf axils. The floral cup is glabrous, long, the sepals blunt triangular long, the petals mostly long and the stamens long. Flowering mainly occurs from January to February and the fruit is a capsule wide and that is shed soon after the seeds are released. Taxonomy and naming This species was first formally described in 1900 by Frederick Manson Bailey who gave it the name ''Leptospermum luehmannii'' in his boo ...
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Aggreflorum Ellipticum
''Aggreflorum ellipticum'' is a species of shrub that is endemic to eastern Australia. It has fibrous, flaky bark, elliptical leaves, white flowers arranged in small groups on the ends of short side branches, and fruit that falls from the plant when mature. Description ''Aggreflorum ellipticum'' is a shrub that typically grows to a height of or more with reddish brown, fibrous or flaky bark, the younger stems covered with soft hairs. The leaves are elliptical, up to long and wide with a blunt point and tapering to a very short petiole. The flowers are white with several together on short side shoots, each flower about wide. The floral cup is densely covered with short, silky hairs, and about long. The sepals are hairy, oblong to hemispherical, about long, the petals long and the stamens about long. Flowering mainly occurs from October to January and the fruit is a capsule about with the remains of the sepals attached, but which fall from the plant when mature. Taxonomy ...
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Australian Botanic Garden Mount Annan
The Australian Botanic Garden Mount Annan is a botanical garden located in a hilly area of the southwestern Sydney suburb of , between Campbelltown and Camden, New South Wales. It is the largest botanical garden in Australia, specializing in native plants, with a collection of over 4000 species. Officially opened in 1988, it was known as Mount Annan Botanic Garden, until 2011. History and management The traditional custodians of the land now occupied by the gardens were the Dharawal indigenous Australian people. Later, it became dairy pasture land, before the land was acquired by the Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain Trust in 1984 and The garden was opened to the public in 1988 by the Duchess of York, Sarah Ferguson. The gardens are managed by the Botanic Gardens Trust trading the Botanic Gardens & Centennial Parklands, that also has responsibility for the Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney and the Blue Mountains Botanic Garden at . The trust is a division of the NSW Office of ...
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